The Trump administration released a new plan for AI regulation that tells states to stay out of the way. The seven-point blueprint says the federal government should avoid most AI rules except for child safety protections.
The plan is all about letting AI companies move fast without getting tangled up in different state laws. Trump’s team wants a unified approach that they say will help America beat other countries in the AI race.
Federal Government Takes Control
The administration’s strategy is simple: keep AI regulation light and centralized. Instead of letting each state create its own AI rules, the plan pushes for federal oversight of a “national strategy to achieve global AI dominance.”
This approach puts Trump at odds with states like California, which have been working on their own AI safety laws. The administration argues that a patchwork of state regulations will slow down American AI companies and give advantages to competitors in China and other countries.
The only area where the plan supports stronger rules is child safety. Beyond that, the message to AI companies is clear: we want you to innovate without bureaucratic roadblocks.
What Happens Next
This sets up a potential showdown between federal and state governments over who gets to regulate AI. States that have already started working on AI laws may push back against federal attempts to override their authority.
Meanwhile, AI companies are likely celebrating. Dealing with one set of federal guidelines is much easier than navigating dozens of different state laws. The big question is whether this hands-off approach will actually help America stay ahead in AI development.

