The Trump administration has released a legislative framework for a national artificial intelligence (AI) policy, aiming to establish uniform rules around AI safety and security across the the country. The six-point outline covers a broad range of AI-related issues, encapsulating regulations on everything from child safety online to the energy consumption of AI data centres. The administration says it wants to work with Congress “in the coming months” to turn the framework into a bill that President Donald Trump can sign into law before the end of the year. The key points include:
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Protecting children and empowering parents
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Safeguarding and strengthening American communities
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Respecting intellectual property rights and supporting creators
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Preventing censorship and protecting free speech
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Enabling innovation and ensuring American AI dominance
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Educating Americans and developing an AI-ready workforce
According to CNBC, Michael Kratsios, director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, said that the framework would “unleash American ingenuity to win the global AI race, delivering breakthroughs that create jobs, lower costs, and improve lives for Americans across the country.”
“It tackles real concerns head-on — protecting our children online, shielding families from higher energy costs, respecting creators’ rights, and supporting American workers — so every citizen can trust and benefit from this incredible technology,” he added.
Why some US States may push back
The Trump administration said that “this framework can succeed only if it is applied uniformly across the United States”, adding that “a patchwork of conflicting state laws would undermine American innovation and our ability to lead in the global AI race. ”
This may mean that individual states would no longer be able to enact their own AI rules if a federal law is passed. That can be seen as a direct challenge to states like New York and California, which have been among the most aggressive in pushing their own AI regulations amid growing public concern about the technology’s impact on jobs, privacy and civil liberties.
This will also override months or years of legislative work and remove their ability to set different standards than whatever Washington agrees on. About 20 US states, including California, Colorado, and Utah have already enacted their own AI laws. Key laws focus on algorithmic discrimination in high-risk systems, transparency in hiring, and consumer data protection.
In December, the administration singled out certain state laws for allegedly forcing companies to “embed ideological bias” into their models.


