What to Know About Trump’s Plan to Prevent States From Regulating AI
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President Donald Trump will sign an executive order this week that aims to preempt states from establishing their own regulations on artificial intelligence (AI) companies in favor of a single federal “rulebook” on the rapidly growing technology, even as major figures in his own party have called for leaving that power to all 50 states.
“We MUST have one Federal Standard instead of a patchwork of 50 State Regulatory Regimes. We can do this in a way that protects children AND prevents censorship!” the president wrote on social media at the time.
Both the tech industry and the Trump administration have argued that allowing a patchwork of legislation across all 50 states will hamper innovation and allow communist China to outpace the United States.
Similar Plan Stripped From OBBB, NDAA
Trump’s original version of his signature spending bill One Big Beautiful Bill Act from earlier this year called for a 10-year moratorium on any statewide regulations on AI, effectively giving companies like OpenAI, Meta, and Google a decade of amnesty from any legal actions taken by individual states.The Senate ended up voting nearly unanimously, 99–1, to strip that provision from the final version of the president’s spending bill.
Draft Order Leaked?
Multiple media outlets, including CNBC, The Financial Times, and The Information, reported on Nov. 20 that Trump was considering signing an executive order that would withhold federal funding from any states that decided to create their own laws around AI. The reports cited a leaked draft of the executive order, which appeared on CNBC shortly after Trump’s social media post calling for a “Federal Standard” on AI.At the time, a White House official told The Epoch Times that until an official announcement came from the White House, any talk regarding potential executive orders was speculation.
The draft order cited by other outlets accuses President Joe Biden of trying to “paralyze” the AI industry and states that instead, the Trump administration would “remove barriers to American AI leadership” by allowing tech companies to “be free to innovate without cumbersome regulation.”
The document goes on to target several Democratic-led states, such as California and Colorado, as case examples of why state AI regulation is a threat to the industry.
Arkansas created a law that clarifies who owns AI-generated content, including the person who provides the data or input used to train a generative AI model or an employer in situations where content is generated for employment duties. The regulation holds that generated content cannot infringe on existing intellectual property rights or copyright.
Few Details on Official Order
We still don’t know much about what the president is planning to put in his official executive order on creating a single federal standard for AI regulation.Republican Resistance
DeSantis, whose state has introduced a wide array of AI-targeted legislation so far this year, said the president’s executive order “doesn’t/can’t” preempt states from enacting legislation, but that Congress could do so “theoretically.”“I doubt Congress has the votes to pass this because it is so unpopular with the public.”
Meanwhile, Hawley recently introduced a bill—among other pieces of legislation intended to clamp down on AI—that would allow parents to sue tech companies in cases where children have been targeted online. The bill was unanimously passed out of committee soon after the senator introduced it.
After Scalise confirmed that the House was no longer going to pursue a 10-year ban on state-level AI regulation in the defense bill, Hawley applauded the move.
Other Opposition
When asked in June about the plan in Congress to prevent states from regulating AI companies for 10 years, Americans by a 3-to-1 margin said they were against the provision, according to a YouGov survey conducted for the Institute of Family Studies.While that sentiment varied somewhat by party affiliation—with 44 percent of 2024 Trump voters opposing the provision compared to 65 percent of people who voted for Vice President Kamala Harris being against it—more voters for both candidates said they were against the plan rather than supporting it.
The now-tossed plan shared many similarities with the president’s, although congressional limits on state AI regulations would have more authority than those from an executive order.
Digital advocacy groups have also opposed the federal government’s plans to curb states’ power on AI.
“While state AI laws have not been perfect, they are genuine attempts to address harms that people across the country face from certain uses of AI systems right now,” the group wrote in a statement.


