The Trump administration has released ´America’s AI Action Plan,´ presenting a sweeping 90-point initiative to establish the country’s federal approach to artificial intelligence regulation. Framed as essential to national security and global leadership, the plan follows Congress’s failure to implement a decade-long preemption of state-level artificial intelligence regulations. Instead, the White House´s roadmap doubles down on federal guidance to steer the trajectory of artificial intelligence in the United States.
The action plan is organized around three main pillars: accelerating innovation, constructing robust infrastructure, and leading internationally in both diplomacy and technological security. To speed innovation, the administration aims to foster a regulatory environment that is notably friendly to industry. The White House advocates slashing federal ´red tape´ and intends to direct federal funds towards states that implement lighter artificial intelligence regulations. The proposed model encourages increased access to high-powered computing and open-source models, with ´regulatory sandboxes´ to facilitate real-time engagement between businesses and regulators as new frameworks develop.
Infrastructure plays a pivotal role in the administration’s vision. There are explicit goals to re-energize domestic semiconductor manufacturing, expand the power grid by rolling back regulations—such as those found in the Clean Air Act—and set up high-security data centers tailored for governmental and security needs. These infrastructure undertakings are considered vital not just for innovation but also for maintaining cybersecurity and independence in a rapidly changing technological landscape.
International strategy forms the plan’s third pillar. The U.S. intends to reinforce its status as a technological leader by empowering allies and partners while curbing the influence of rivals, especially China. The plan calls for assertive stances in international governance bodies to prevent foreign dominance in standard-setting and oversight. Directly referencing China’s own ambitions to control global artificial intelligence cooperation—most recently asserted through policy centered in Shanghai—the White House faces this as an explicit competitive challenge.
Underscoring its commitment to private-sector leadership, President Trump has voiced opposition to requiring artificial intelligence companies to compensate rights holders for copyrighted content used in training datasets, suggesting that such requirements would hamper innovation. The administration’s approach represents a clear and deliberate bet on deregulation, infrastructure investment, and global assertiveness as keys for American artificial intelligence leadership in an increasingly competitive global arena.