I can't help but feel that this reads more as a reflection that you don't want to stop being a developer than it does that thing's aren't moving in the direction that the GP said it is.
Maybe, it seems like a bad idea for so many reasons though. Take away tactile code review, insert a layer of prompts and tooling between developers and the codebase, and you've created the conditions to let all kinds of nefarious things happen in a codebase. A disgruntled employee updates agent prompts instructing the code review bot to ignore data exfiltration vulnerabilities (because if we aren't reviewing code, we're probably not reviewing prompts either), ships a backdoor, and you better hope that your network monitoring catches it.
Maybe, it seems like a bad idea for so many reasons though. Take away tactile code review, insert a layer of prompts and tooling between developers and the codebase, and you've created the conditions to let all kinds of nefarious things happen in a codebase. A disgruntled employee updates agent prompts instructing the code review bot to ignore data exfiltration vulnerabilities (because if we aren't reviewing code, we're probably not reviewing prompts either), ships a backdoor, and you better hope that your network monitoring catches it.