Trump EO creates DOJ AI Litigation Task Force to challenge state AI laws; Commerce to weigh broadband funding penalties
President Trump signed an executive order directing the Justice Department to create an "AI Litigation Task Force" — coordinating with the FTC and FCC — to sue states over what the White House calls "onerous" AI laws, while the Commerce Department must compile a list of problematic state rules and study whether federal rural broadband and other grant funding can be withheld from states with unfavorable AI laws. The order carves out certain child‑safety and government‑procurement measures and cites states with cross‑sector AI statutes (Colorado, California, Utah, Texas), but experts and state officials warn it will prompt extensive litigation and that broad preemption likely requires congressional action.
📌 Key Facts
- The executive order directs the Department of Justice (Attorney General Pam Bondi) to create an "AI Litigation Task Force" to challenge state AI laws in court, with the FTC and FCC instructed to coordinate with DOJ on the effort.
- Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick is ordered to compile a list of "problematic" state AI regulations and to study whether federal rural broadband funds and other grants can be withheld from states with unfavorable AI laws.
- The administration says the EO will target the "most onerous" state rules while carving out and not opposing certain child-safety measures and rules governing how state governments procure and use AI.
- The White House framed the EO as necessary to avoid a 50-state "patchwork" of regulations and to protect U.S. competitiveness with China, with Trump warning there must not be fragmented approval processes ('there's only going to be one winner').
- Four states already have cross‑sector AI statutes in place: Colorado, California, Utah and Texas.
- The EO tasks AI adviser David Sacks with working with Congress on a national AI framework and national legislation.
- Political reactions are mixed and contentious: some Republican leaders (including Gov. Ron DeSantis) criticized the move and are pursuing state-level AI plans (DeSantis drafting a Florida "AI Bill of Rights"), while multiple states and officials (including California Sen. Scott Wiener) vowed to defy the EO and litigate; several senators urged Congress to act, with Sen. Maria Cantwell calling the EO "overly broad" and Sen. Brian Schatz planning legislation to repeal it.
- Policy experts and legal analysts predict extensive litigation over the DOJ suits and any funding leverage, and note that broad preemption of state AI laws likely would require an act of Congress; the EO appears to anticipate court challenges.
📊 Relevant Data
In the US AI workforce in 2022, Asian workers are overrepresented compared to their 6.4% share of the US population, while Black workers (13.7% of population) and Hispanic workers (19.1% of population) are underrepresented compared to their shares in the overall US workforce.
The U.S. AI Workforce: Analyzing Current Supply and Growth — Center for Security and Emerging Technology
A healthcare algorithm's racial bias reduced the care Black patients received by over 50%, as Black patients had to be sicker than White patients to receive the same risk score; Black individuals comprise 13.7% of the US population.
Rooting Out AI’s Biases — Hopkins Bloomberg Public Health Magazine
In mortgage lending, Black and Latino borrowers were three times more likely to receive high-cost loans compared with White borrowers; Black individuals comprise 13.7% and Hispanic 19.1% of the US population.
Algorithmic discrimination in the credit domain: what do we know about it? — AI & SOCIETY
Massive Text Embedding models used in resume screening favored White-associated names in 85.1% of cases and disadvantaged Black males in 100% of cases; Black individuals comprise 13.7% of the US population.
📰 Sources (5)
- Confirms four states with broad private‑sector AI laws: Colorado, California, Utah and Texas.
- Details that the executive order directs agencies to pressure states by potentially withholding funding (e.g., broadband) and by challenging state AI laws in court.
- Specifies carve‑outs: the EO does not seek to preempt certain state child‑safety provisions or rules on how state governments procure and use AI.
- Adds the administration’s argument that a state‑by‑state 'patchwork' impedes growth and risks U.S. competitiveness versus China.
- Multiple states and policymakers publicly vow to defy the EO and proceed with state AI laws; California Sen. Scott Wiener says, 'we will see them in court.'
- New York Assemblymember Alex Bores criticizes the EO and urges congressional guardrails.
- Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis is drafting a Florida 'AI Bill of Rights' covering parental controls, privacy, consumer protection, NIL protections, and data center harms.
- Utah Gov. Spencer Cox earlier called for a MAGA-backed alternative; Steve Bannon criticizes AI czar David Sacks as 'misleading the president' on preemption.
- Sen. Maria Cantwell calls the EO 'overly broad' and says Congress must pass a bipartisan national framework; Sen. Marsha Blackburn says she’ll work with the president on a federal framework.
- Sen. Brian Schatz says he plans to introduce legislation to repeal the EO.
- Experts forecast extensive litigation over both the DOJ suits envisioned by the EO and any funding leverage used against states.
- Trump publicly framed the EO as necessary to avoid a 'patchwork' of 50 state approvals and to compete with China, saying 'there's only going to be one winner.'
- The EO specifically directs AG Pam Bondi to create a new DOJ task force to challenge state AI laws and directs Commerce to compile a list of 'problematic' state regulations.
- The order threatens to restrict funding from a broadband deployment program and other grants to states with AI laws.
- Administration AI adviser David Sacks said the push will target only the 'most onerous' state rules and will not oppose 'kid safety' measures.
- Article identifies four states with cross‑sector AI statutes to date: Colorado, California, Utah, and Texas.
- Political reaction includes criticism from Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (calling preemption a 'subsidy to Big Tech') and Sen. Ed Markey (calling it an 'early Christmas present' to CEOs).
- The executive order directs DOJ to create an 'AI Litigation Task Force' to sue states over AI-related laws.
- FTC and FCC are directed to coordinate with DOJ to follow a White House plan to circumvent 'onerous' state and local AI regulations.
- Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick is directed to study whether federal rural broadband funds can be withheld from states with unfavorable AI laws.
- Trump and AI advisor David Sacks say the administration will avoid challenging some child-safety measures while targeting the 'most onerous' state rules.
- Order anticipates court challenges; tech policy researchers say broad state-law preemption likely requires an act of Congress.
- The order tasks Sacks with working with Congress on national AI legislation.