A provision embedded within Congress´ current federal budget bill would impose a sweeping ten-year moratorium on the enforcement of any state or local laws regulating artificial intelligence. This clause, located in Title IV, Subtitle C, Part 2 of the proposed legislation and specifically detailed in Section 43201 (page 277), would prevent states from implementing or enforcing rules covering artificial intelligence models, systems, or automated decision systems engaged in interstate commerce, with only limited exceptions allowed for facilitative measures or criminal penalties.
Critics, including bipartisan coalitions of state lawmakers and advocacy groups like the Transparency Coalition, argue that the moratorium represents an unprecedented federal overreach. More than 500 lawmakers from states of both parties released a letter voicing strong opposition, underscoring the importance of ongoing debates and regulatory efforts at the state level. The restriction would effectively invalidate a vast array of current and proposed laws targeting algorithmic bias in employment, deepfakes in political campaigns, automated healthcare decisions, surveillance systems, consumer transparency rules, and data protection measures tailored to artificial intelligence technologies.
Legal analysis raises significant questions about the moratorium’s constitutionality and political viability. Experts cite the 10th Amendment and established state powers, suggesting the measure could be susceptible to court challenges. The provision may also violate the Senate’s Byrd Rule, which prohibits inclusion of policy-focused clauses in budget reconciliation bills. Unless overruled by a supermajority or the Vice President, such a challenge could strip the clause from the bill. The current timeline sees Republican leadership and President Trump pushing for passage before July 4, 2025, ahead of the September 30 budget reconciliation deadline. Meanwhile, prominent legal outlets estimate the moratorium would preempt over 1,000 active or enacted state artificial intelligence regulatory bills, dramatically altering the trajectory of technology governance in the United States if it survives intact.