DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

MAGA is once again divided over AI

November 20, 2025
in News
MAGA is once again divided over AI
Donald Trump
Trump is revisiting efforts to ban states from regulating AI, and it’s drawing pushback from members of his own party. Win McNamee/Getty Images
  • Trump is re-upping efforts to ban states from enacting regulations on AI.
  • It’s drawing strong pushback from members of his own party.
  • Republicans previously tried to limit states’ AI regulatory power in early drafts of Trump’s “Big Beautiful Bill.”

If you thought Republicans were done arguing among themselves about AI, think again.

President Donald Trump is revisiting efforts to restrict states’ ability to regulate artificial intelligence, and it’s drawing significant pushback from members of his own party.

In a Tuesday Truth Social post, Trump said that “overregulation by the States is threatening to undermine” the AI industry, calling for “one Federal Standard instead of a patchwork of 50 State Regulatory Regimes.”

The Trump administration is also reportedly drafting an executive order that would allow the Department of Justice to sue states over their AI regulations, though a White House official told BI that until an official announcement, “discussion about potential executive orders is speculation.”

It’s shaping up to be a repeat of a fight Republicans had over the summer, when lawmakers tried to include a 10-year moratorium on state-level AI regulation into the “Big Beautiful Bill.”

“States must retain the right to regulate and make laws on AI and anything else for the benefit of their state,” Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia posted on X on Thursday morning. “Federalism must be preserved.”

The AI provision was ultimately struck from the megabill in a 99-1 vote in the Senate in July, after a series of revisions and a contentious debate among Republicans.

The Trump administration later released an AI Action Plan that called for withholding federal funding from states with strict AI regulations.

Now, Republicans may try to do it again via a must-pass defense bill. House Majority Leader Steve Scalise told Punchbowl News on Monday that Republicans were looking at attaching a version of the provision to the National Defense Authorization Act, or NDAA, and Trump indicated that he would support such a move.

“Put it in the NDAA, or pass a separate Bill, and nobody will ever be able to compete with America,” Trump wrote on Tuesday.

Proponents of the idea have argued that it’s important for both the development of the AI industry and competition with China to prevent the emergence of a “patchwork” of different AI laws across 50 states.

Opponents charge that states should have the right to enact AI safety laws, and that those laws are filling an important gap in the absence of federal regulation.

“If it gets in the NDAA, it’ll be a huge problem,” Sen. Josh Hawley of Missouri, a proponent of AI regulation, told reporters on Wednesday.

Among those pushing back are Republican governors, including Ron DeSantis of Florida and Sarah Huckabee Sanders of Arkansas.

“Stripping states of jurisdiction to regulate AI is a subsidy to Big Tech,” DeSantis wrote on X, saying that the provision would “prevent states from protecting against online censorship of political speech, predatory applications that target children, violations of intellectual property rights and data center intrusions on power/water resources.”

“Drop the preemption plan now and protect our kids and communities,” wrote Sanders, who led a group of 20 states in opposing the AI moratorium in the “Big Beautiful Bill” over the summer.

Read the original article on Business Insider

The post MAGA is once again divided over AI appeared first on Business Insider.

They left their jobs in their 50s to reconnect with their kids. It helped them rethink their long-term career plans.
News

They left their jobs in their 50s to reconnect with their kids. It helped them rethink their long-term career plans.

by Business Insider
December 22, 2025

Pablo Slough and Karen Gilchrist quit their tech jobs in mid-2024 to take a gap year to spend time with ...

Read more
News

What food safety experts say they won’t order when dining out at restaurants

December 22, 2025
News

Alix Earle flaunts post-split bikini body on birthday trip to Cabo after Braxton Berrios breakup

December 22, 2025
News

Waymo Suspended Service in San Francisco After Problems During Power Outage

December 22, 2025
News

Trump administration demands that Mexican crews operating trains in U.S. can speak English

December 22, 2025
James Ransone, Actor Known for ‘The Wire,’ Dies at 46

James Ransone, Actor Known for ‘The Wire,’ Dies at 46

December 22, 2025
This millennial dreamed of owning his own food business. He did it — but he’s facing one big problem.

This millennial dreamed of owning his own food business. He did it — but he’s facing one big problem.

December 22, 2025
Author of key report on Palisades fire was upset over changes that weakened it, sources say

Author of key report on Palisades fire was upset over changes that weakened it, sources say

December 22, 2025

DNYUZ © 2025

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2025