Trump urges Congress for national AI framework as states act

President Donald Trump and his administration are pushing a deadlocked Congress to enact a national AI regulatory framework, criticizing state-level laws as a patchwork that burdens innovation. Republican state lawmakers, frustrated by federal inaction, continue passing their own AI regulations focused on child safety and transparency. The White House recently released principles it wants Congress to adopt.

President Donald Trump arrived in Miami on March 27, 2026, ahead of remarks at the FII PRIORITY Summit in Miami Beach. His administration has intensified calls for Congress to create a unified national framework for artificial intelligence regulation, arguing it would provide certainty for innovators and prevent a patchwork of state laws. Michael Kratsios, head of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, stated earlier this week, 'We want to create an environment where innovators have certainty about the way that they can develop their products and it's something only congress can provide. The first step is to create one national framework so we can avoid a patchwork.' The White House released a regulatory framework outlining principles such as protecting children from harm and shielding consumers from data center costs, urging Congress to enact it. Advisors like David Sacks, the AI and crypto czar, echo concerns that state laws hinder innovation. In Utah, Republican State Rep. Doug Fiefia proposed a bill requiring tech companies to disclose consumer protections, but it stalled after a White House memo deemed it 'unfixable' and against the administration's agenda. Fiefia, a former Google employee, noted Congress's gridlock leaves states to protect constituents, especially children. A White House official told NPR on background that the administration has not blocked state child safety measures. Similar efforts persist elsewhere: Pennsylvania Republican State Sen. Tracy Pennycuick sponsored the SAFECHAT Act mandating safeguards against AI chatbots promoting self-harm or violence. Texas Republican State Sen. Angela Paxton supports strong federal rules but sees states filling the gap, warning unregulated tech is the 'wild west.' Reactions vary. Riki Parikh of the Alliance for Secure AI called the framework insufficient on accountability and job impacts. Tennessee Attorney General Jonathan Skrmetti welcomed it as progress after opposing a prior White House-backed 10-year state moratorium push, which failed. Sen. Marsha Blackburn, R-Tennessee, is advancing her TRUMP AMERICA AI Act to expand the framework. Polls show majority concern over Trump's Big Tech ties and Republican support for AI regulation. The White House reports ongoing talks with legislators.

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Illustration of President Trump signing an executive order on AI and cybersecurity in the Oval Office.
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Trump could sign AI and cybersecurity executive order as soon as Thursday, reports say

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President Donald Trump could sign an executive order focused on artificial intelligence and cybersecurity as soon as Thursday, according to reports describing a draft that would create a voluntary framework for developers of advanced AI models to notify the U.S. government ahead of major releases.

President Trump signed a National Security Presidential Memorandum on Friday directing faster integration of advanced AI tools into US defense operations. The move follows an executive order earlier in the week aimed at regulating the AI industry.

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President Donald Trump signed an executive order on June 2 calling for voluntary government review of advanced AI models 30 days before their release. The order focuses on cybersecurity risks but imposes no mandatory requirements on companies.

A recent podcast episode raised concerns that the UK government’s growing use of AI tools in public services—and potentially in elements of legislative work—could increase security and sovereignty risks tied to overseas providers.

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Chief executives from leading artificial intelligence companies are calling on US lawmakers to pass new rules that would tighten oversight of synthetic DNA sequences.

Opposition to large data centers is emerging across party lines in several states. Recent moves by governors in Texas and New York highlight the trend. Local votes and polling show broad public resistance.

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Anthropic leaders met with Trump administration officials in Washington on Monday but failed to resolve a dispute over export controls on its advanced AI models. The controls, imposed last week due to jailbreaking concerns, remain in place after the high-level talks.

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