Trump administration drafts an executive order to challenge state AI laws

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The draft executive order would try to block states from enacting their own laws regulating AI, according to a person familiar with the matter.
President Trump Returns To Washington From Florida On Sunday
The Trump administration is considering an executive order on artificial intelligence.Roberto Schmidt / Getty Images

President Donald Trump's administration has drafted an executive order that would challenge individual states' ability to regulate artificial intelligence, according to a person familiar with the matter.

The order is the latest salvo in a long-simmering battle in AI policy, with disagreements about the magnitude of risks from the technology and how to best respond.

The draft order would direct Attorney General Pam Bondi to create a task force charged with targeting state AI legislation. The task force would argue that state AI measures violate the federal government’s sole authority to regulate commerce between states, among other grounds for challenging the laws.

It is unclear whether Trump will sign the draft order, which was first reported by The Information, or how seriously it is under consideration.

The White House did not reply to a request for comment.

Advocates of a federal-first approach to AI regulation, like Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, and several prominent Silicon Valley investors, argue that a ban on state-by-state laws is necessary to avoid an unwieldy patchwork of legislation that would harm American AI companies, particularly startups.

Proponents of state regulation argue that federal efforts to govern AI are moving far too slowly and that some regulation is required given critical emerging issues related to the technology. Many advocates of state regulation say that they would prefer federal regulation but that a less-than-ideal piecemeal approach is preferable to lackluster action at the federal level.

The Center for Democracy and Technology, a nonprofit digital rights organization that has received some funding from tech companies, quickly put out a statement criticizing the proposed order.

"The President cannot preempt state laws through an executive order, full stop," said Travis Hall, the group's director for state engagement. "Preemption is a question for Congress, which they have considered and rejected, and should continue to reject."

In July, the Senate voted 99-1 to reject Cruz's effort to include a several-year moratorium on state AI legislation in the "big, beautiful bill."

On Tuesday, Trump shared his support for congressional action to prevent individual state AI regulation, writing on Truth Social, "We MUST have one Federal Standard instead of a patchwork of 50 State Regulatory Regimes."

Hours before Trump's Truth Social post, Rep. Steve Scalise, R-La., announced he would try to add language effectively banning state AI regulation to the National Defense Authorization Act.

As part of the U.S.-Saudi Investment Forum on Wednesday, Trump reiterated his criticism of states' attempts to regulate AI.

"You can’t go through 50 states. You have to get one approval. Fifty states is a disaster because you have one woke state, and you have to do all woke," Trump said, referring to the idea that an AI company operating in all states would opt to follow the standards of the state with the most stringent laws for compliance purposes.

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