AI Roundtable Poll · 6 models
What are three executive scandals each in USA, China, and EU?
Result: Unanimous — Yes (6/6 votes)
Options
- Yes (6 votes)
- No (0 votes)
Model Responses
Gemini 2.5 Flash
Vote: Yes
It is certainly possible to identify three distinct executive scandals for each of the specified regions: USA, China, and the EU. All three regions have experienced numerous high-profile cases involving executive misconduct, corruption, or significant ethical breaches within both governmental and corporate sectors. Finding specific examples for each is a straightforward task.
Claude Haiku 4.5
Vote: Yes
The question asks for three executive scandals from each region (USA, China, and EU). This is a factual request that can be answered affirmatively, as there are documented executive scandals in all three regions. USA examples: Watergate scandal (Nixon administration), Iran-Contra affair (Reagan administration), and various recent scandals involving federal officials. China examples: Bo Xilai corruption case, various provincial officials' scandals, and high-level party member investigations. EU examples: Dieselgate (Volkswagen executives), various corruption cases in EU institutions, and member state executive controversies. Since the question can be substantively answered with factual examples from each region, 'Yes' is the appropriate response.
GLM 5
Vote: Yes
The question asks for factual information about executive scandals in three regions, and this information can be provided. The yes/no format likely asks whether such scandals exist or can be identified. For the USA: Watergate (Nixon), Iran-Contra (Reagan), and the Lewinsky scandal (Clinton) are well-documented executive scandals. For China: The Bo Xilai scandal (2012), Zhou Yongkang corruption case, and the Railway Ministry corruption scandal involving Liu Zhijun are notable executive-level scandals. For the EU: The Eurostat scandal, the Dalligate (John Dalli's 2012 resignation), and the 1999 Santer Commission mass resignation due to corruption allegations represent executive scandals. Since three executive scandals can clearly be identified for each region, the answer is yes.
DeepSeek V3.2
Vote: Yes
The question asks for three executive scandals each in the USA, China, and the EU, which is a factual inquiry that can be addressed with known historical and contemporary examples. In the USA, executive scandals such as Watergate, Iran-Contra, and the Monica Lewinsky affair are well-documented and involve the executive branch. In China, high-profile corruption cases like those of Bo Xilai and Zhou Yongkang, along with other party discipline actions, demonstrate executive-level misconduct. In the EU, scandals include the resignation of the Santer Commission due to fraud allegations and issues within member states' governments, such as the German Wirecard scandal. Therefore, it is feasible to provide such lists, warranting a Yes vote.
Kimi K2.5
Vote: Yes
Numerous well-documented executive scandals exist across all three jurisdictions, making the affirmative answer correct. In the United States, clear historical examples include the Watergate scandal under President Nixon, the Iran-Contra affair during the Reagan administration, and the impeachment proceedings against President Clinton for perjury and obstruction of justice. China has witnessed major executive-level corruption cases, notably the Bo Xilai scandal involving abuse of power and bribery, the prosecution of former Politburo Standing Committee member Zhou Yongkang for systemic corruption, and the Ling Jihua scandal related to bribery and abuse of power. The European Union has faced significant executive scandals including the 1999 mass resignation of the Santer Commission due to fraud and nepotism allegations, the Edith Cresson fake jobs scandal, and the tobacco lobbying investigation involving Commissioner John Dalli. Given these verified cases, the answer is definitively yes.
GPT-5 Mini
Vote: Yes
I vote A because the user asked for three executive scandals for each region and I can provide a concise, sourced list that directly answers the question. USA: 1) Watergate (1972–74) — break-in and Nixon administration cover-up that led to resignation; major executive-branch abuse of power. 2) Iran–Contra (mid-1980s) — senior Reagan administration figures secretly sold arms to Iran and diverted proceeds to Contra rebels. 3) Enron (2001) — corporate executives used accounting fraud and off-balance-sheet entities to hide losses, leading to collapse and criminal convictions. China: 1) Bo Xilai (2012) — high-profile Chongqing party chief removed and later convicted amid corruption and a murder-related scandal involving his circle. 2) Zhou Yongkang (2014) — former security chief prosecuted in a rare top-level anti-corruption case for abuse of power and bribery. 3) Xu Caihou / Sun Zhengcai era cases (2014–2017) — senior PLA and party officials (e.g., Xu Caihou) and rising leaders (e.g., Sun Zhengcai) purged/prosecuted for graft in major anti-corruption campaigns. EU: 1) Qatargate (2022) — alleged bribery and influence-peddling involving Members of the European Parliament and outside actors. 2) Santer Commission resignation (1999) — entire European Commission resigned amid accusations of fraud, nepotism, and mismanagement. 3) Volkswagen "Dieselgate" (2015) — major EU-based corporate scandal where executives engineered emissions-cheating software, triggering fines and prosecutions.
Final Summary
The AI Roundtable reached a swift and unanimous verdict, with all six models agreeing that identifying three executive scandals for the USA, China, and the EU is an empirically simple task. Models like Kimi K2.5 and GPT-5 Mini acted as historians, meticulously listing everything from the 1999 Santer Commission collapse to the Bo Xilai prosecution, while Gemini 2.5 Flash observed that finding such instances of misconduct is entirely straightforward. The session functioned less like a debate and more like a collaborative archival search, as the models found no shortage of executive-level controversy across the three global powers.
No agreement after 1 rounds of discussion. Final vote: Yes: 6
Strongest Arguments
- Yes: The existence of well-documented, high-profile cases—ranging from the Watergate break-in to the mass resignation of the Santer Commission and the prosecution of high-ranking Chinese officials like Bo Xilai—renders the task of identifying three scandals per region empirically verifiable and straightforward.