SIGNAL
← Back to feed
Politics2h ago75% confidenceConfidence 75% — the share of independent, credible sources corroborating the core facts.

White House Seeks Federal AI Preemption in Exchange for Tech Safety Priorities

1 source

The White House is negotiating with Congress to establish federal preemption of state AI regulations in exchange for advancing federal policies on child safety online and deepfake protections. Senator Marsha Blackburn is leading negotiations on behalf of Capitol Hill to finalize the legislative text. The deal reflects broader tensions between state-level and federal regulatory approaches to emerging technology.

The White House is engaged in negotiations with Capitol Hill to create a federal framework that would preempt certain state-level artificial intelligence regulations. In exchange, the administration would advance federal legislation addressing child safety online and protections against deepfakes. Senator Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.) is spearheading the negotiations to develop the final legislative language for an AI preemption package. This arrangement represents an attempt to balance competing regulatory interests: the tech industry's preference for uniform federal standards versus states' desire to implement their own AI safeguards. The negotiations highlight ongoing debates about whether technology regulation should be centralized at the federal level or allow for state-by-state variation.

What's missing

The articles do not specify which state AI laws would be preempted, what specific child safety and deepfake protections are being proposed federally, or the timeline for these negotiations. Additionally, perspectives from state legislators or consumer advocacy groups opposing preemption are not included.

How coverage differed

The Hill's reporting presents this as a straightforward negotiation without editorial framing. Coverage may vary across sources in whether they emphasize the benefits of federal uniformity for business or the concerns about preempting stronger state protections.

What different sources said

  • The HillCenter

    White House negotiating federal preemption of state AI laws in exchange for Hill priorities

Related

PoliticsConfidence 85% — the share of independent, credible sources corroborating the core facts.

Florida GOP Gubernatorial Candidate Proposes Closing All Abortion Clinics, Replacing Them With Crisis Pregnancy Centers

James Fishback, a Republican candidate in Florida's gubernatorial primary, stated he would close all 53 abortion clinics in the state if elected and replace them with crisis pregnancy centers offering support services. Fishback has made strong anti-abortion statements, calling abortion "murder" and saying he would prosecute it as such. The proposal represents an extreme position within the GOP primary race, where Trump has endorsed a different candidate.

1 source4m ago
PoliticsConfidence 85% — the share of independent, credible sources corroborating the core facts.

House Republicans Advance $70 Billion Immigration Enforcement Funding Bill

House Republicans are moving to pass a $70 billion bill funding immigration enforcement agencies through Trump's term, after the Senate approved it last week. The legislation allocates funds to ICE, Customs and Border Protection, and the Department of Homeland Security, and Democrats have announced unified opposition. The vote represents the culmination of a months-long funding standoff between the parties over immigration enforcement priorities.

1 source4m ago
PoliticsConfidence 92% — the share of independent, credible sources corroborating the core facts.

Spencer Pratt's Los Angeles Mayoral Campaign Fails to Reach Runoff

Spencer Pratt, the reality television personality and former 'The Hills' star, did not qualify for the November runoff election for Los Angeles mayor after the primary vote count was finalized. Pratt ran as a Republican focusing on homelessness, crime, and city decay, leveraging his celebrity status and AI-generated campaign videos. His failure reflects the steep challenge facing Republican candidates in a heavily Democratic city where no Republican has won the mayoral race since 1997.

1 source5m ago