My own bit of cynicism is that regulating the negative impacts of technology on workforce segments in the US is a non-starter if you approach it from the technology-end of the issue rather than the social safety net end. Most of these automation waves that plunged entire employment categories and large metropolitan areas into oblivion were a net gain for the economy even if it was concentrated at the top. I think the government will temporarily socialize the costs of the corporate profit with stimulus payments, extended unemployment benefits, and any other thing they can do to hold people over until there's a comparatively small risk of triggering real social change. Then they just blame it on the individuals.