Artificial Intelligence & Machine Learning
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Next-Generation Technologies & Secure Development
Executive Order Scraps Biden-Era Policies
U.S. President Donald Trump signed an executive order directing the development of a plan within 180 days to ensure America’s dominance in artificial intelligence.
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Dubbed “Removing Barriers to American Leadership in Artificial Intelligence,” the order seeks to eliminate what the administration deems regulatory hurdles while ensuring AI systems are “free from ideological bias or engineered social agendas.”
The directive assigns key responsibilities to senior officials, including the Office of Management and Budget director, White House advisors, and newly-appointed Special Advisor for AI and cryptocurrency David Sacks. They are tasked with creating a strategic framework for advancing AI, revising existing policies and coordinating efforts across national security, economic and technology domains.
The administration will review and potentially rescind policies implemented under former President Joe Biden’s 2023 AI executive order. Trump’s order criticizes Biden-era policy as “dangerous” and overly restrictive, arguing that it stifled private-sector innovation. Federal agencies must identify and amend or repeal any directives inconsistent with the new policy goals.
OMB has a 60-day deadline to revise specific memorandums issued under the previous administration that governed AI procurement and usage within government operations. Trump’s order seeks the removal of provisions related to equity and additional oversight for AI systems impacting civil rights or safety.
The changes mark a shift from bipartisan efforts to incorporate civil rights protections in federal AI use.
Nik Marda, a former official with the Office of Science and Technology Policy under Biden, labeled the move a step backward, warning it could exacerbate bias and discrimination risks inherent in AI systems. He told NextGov/FCW that the rollback diverges from Trump’s earlier 2020 executive order on AI, which acknowledged civil liberties as a critical aspect of AI governance.
Eric Gastfriend, executive director of Americans for Responsible Innovation, reportedly described the order as a placeholder while the administration formulates a more detailed AI policy. He said that agencies had already halted AI policy work initiated under the Biden administration following the repeal of the prior executive order.
Former acting director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy Alondra Nelson said the new order would force agencies to be tasked with reviewing initiatives “that are already helping people, with an implicit intent to unwind them.”
“In 60 days, we’ll know which Americans’ rights and safety the Trump Administration believes deserves to be protected in the age of AI, and if there will be a level playing field for every technologist, developer and innovator or just the tech billionaires,” Nelson said.