As the capabilities of generative AI advances at record speeds, it was only a matter of time before someone put an artificial intelligence tool in charge of something far more consequential than writing emails or summarizing meetings.
But Albania has just leapt far ahead of the curve — or off a cliff, depending on your perspective.
Meet Diella, the world’s first AI cabinet minister.
Diella is an entirely artificial government official — an AI-generated bot installed by Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama to oversee all public procurement and tender awarding in the country.
And suddenly, the question doesn’t seem quite so absurd: What if bots really are the answer to corrupt leadership, both in the government and in the workplace?
CEO Scandals Keep Coming And Trust Keeps Dropping
In recent years, we’ve seen an unrelenting parade of corporate scandals involving CEOs, from financial fraud and insider trading to toxic workplace cultures and outright criminal activity.
- FTX’s Sam Bankman-Fried is now serving 25 years for fraud, after billions of dollars in crypto vanished under his watch.
- McDonald’s ousted CEO Steve Easterbrook was forced to repay $105 million after it was revealed he lied about multiple inappropriate relationships with employees.
- Nikola founder Trevor Milton was convicted of defrauding investors by exaggerating the capabilities of his company’s technology.
- OpenAI’s own board ousted (and then re-hired) Sam Altman in a brief but chaotic power struggle that underscored just how little transparency exists even in the companies building AI itself.
The impact goes beyond the headlines. Scandals like these erode trust among employees, investors, and the public. In a hybrid work environment where leaders are already less visible, their credibility and integrity carry even more weight.
Why Does This Keep Happening?
While every scandal is unique, patterns emerge. Power tends to concentrate at the top, often with weak accountability structures. Boards are either too loyal, too disconnected, or too slow to act. In many cases, CEOs essentially run their own oversight.
And when human beings are at the center of unchecked systems — especially systems saturated with money, status, or influence — the temptation for abuse is ever-present.
Now consider the pitch behind Diella.
An AI bot won’t take kickbacks, it won’t play favorites, it doesn’t have family members to funnel contracts to or a re-election campaign to fund, and it doesn’t get high on its own supply.
Yes, it’s programmed by humans. And yes, there are valid questions about oversight, transparency, and ethics (more on that in a moment). But it’s not hard to see why, in a country like Albania — where public tender corruption has historically been a gateway to organized crime — the idea of a “clean” machine in charge has populist appeal.
What Happens When Bots Run Big Decisions?
It may sound dystopian or utopian…or both. But Diella is the latest in a growing line of experiments testing whether AI can fill leadership gaps created by flawed human behavior. Algorithms already make decisions about:
- Loan approvals
- Hiring screenings
- Parole recommendations
- Healthcare triage
- Content moderation, and more
In the workplace, generative AI tools are increasingly being looped into strategic decision-making, with some companies letting bots lead project planning, give employee feedback, and analyze leadership performance.
In theory, AI could help correct for human bias, or at least make decisions auditable and explainable in a way shady executives rarely are.
But AI is only as ethical as the humans who train it. Without transparency, AI can reinforce existing power structures, hide bias in the code, or quietly reflect the same corruption it was designed to eliminate.
So the question isn’t just “Can AI lead?” It’s: “Who’s programming the leader? And who’s watching them?”
Could This Actually Work in the Private Sector?
Imagine a scenario where a multinational company installs an AI compliance officer that flags contracts with red flags and cannot be ignored. Or an algorithm that audits executive compensation packages against actual performance metrics, with full transparency to the board and shareholders.
Or, going further: What if the CEO role itself becomes augmented as a hybrid of human leadership and machine logic, where every major decision must pass through a non-human filter that checks for bias, legal risk, and ethical concerns?
Call it a “co-CEO” arrangement: one person, one bot.
We already use AI in hiring, forecasting, and performance tracking. Is replacing — or at least rigorously checking — C-suite decision-making that much more radical?
Not really, and especially not as leadership scandals keep eroding trust in human-led institutions.
The Risks Are Real, But So Are the Rewards
There’s no pretending AI is a magic fix. Just because Diella can’t be bribed doesn’t mean the people behind her code can’t be bought. And governments are often notorious for outsourcing tech without fully understanding its limitations.
But Diella raises an important question for the private sector: If corruption, ego, and power-hoarding are the Achilles’ heel of executive leadership, is there a role for neutral, machine-led logic to create checks, or even lead in certain areas? Could a bot help companies keep their values intact when human leaders falter? Could AI make leadership more accountable — not less?
It’s early. Diella hasn’t awarded a single contract yet. And Albania, still wrestling with its EU ambitions, is a far cry from Silicon Valley or Wall Street. But as AI continues to reshape the future of work, this experiment isn’t as far-fetched as it sounds.
After all, if bots can write code, manage teams, and pass the bar exam, then maybe they can help save leadership, too.
If nothing else, they won’t send themselves millions in hush money and lie about it later, or get caught on a kiss cam with their head of HR, and that might just be enough reason to take them seriously.

Dr. Gleb Tsipursky – The Office Whisperer
Nirit Cohen – WorkFutures
Angela Howard – Culture Expert
Drew Jones – Design & Innovation
Jonathan Price – CRE & Flex Expert














