New Federal AI Action Plan Prioritizes Deregulation, Infrastructure, and Global Leadership
MoFo AI Flash Update: Delivering updates on the latest AI news.
New Federal AI Action Plan Prioritizes Deregulation, Infrastructure, and Global Leadership
MoFo AI Flash Update: Delivering updates on the latest AI news.
The White House released on July 23, 2025, Winning the Race: America’s AI Action Plan (“AI Action Plan”) pursuant to President Trump’s Executive Order 14179, Removing Barriers to American Leadership in Artificial Intelligence. The AI Action Plan identifies over 90 Federal policy actions across three pillars that the Trump Administration plans to address:
In addition to launching the Administration’s AI Action Plan, during an AI summit held on July 23, President Trump signed three Executive Orders:
The Trump Administration seeks to accelerate AI innovation by removing regulatory roadblocks and “ideological biases.” To speed up the building of U.S. AI infrastructure, the Trump Administration intends to modify the environmental permitting system and fast-track energy projects. Internationally, the Trump Administration will actively promote U.S. exports and work with “like-minded” countries to advocate an international AI governance approach aligned with the Administration’s values.
Notably, the Introduction to the AI Action plan was signed by Michael Kratsios, Assistant to the President for Science and Technology, David Sacks, Special Advisor for AI and Crypto, and Marco Rubio, Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs, who describe the potential of AI to usher in “[a]n industrial revolution, an information revolution, and a renaissance—all at once.”
The following provides an overview of some of the key policy actions identified in the AI Action Plan.
The AI Action Plan outlines 15 key conditions that it considers essential to accelerate AI innovation. These include eliminating “red tape” and “onerous regulation”; ensuring frontier AI technologies uphold free speech and American values; promoting open-source and open-weight AI; supporting the next generation of manufacturing; creating world-class datasets; safeguarding commercial and government AI innovations; and addressing the legal challenges posed by synthetic media. For each of these conditions, the AI Action Plan recommends specific policy actions. Below is a summary of the recommended actions in six of these focus areas.
Removing Red Tape and Onerous Regulation
One theme of the Trump Administration’s approach is that the U.S. private sector must be unencumbered by bureaucratic red tape. As an initial step, in January, President Trump issued an Executive Order “Removing Barriers to American Leadership in Artificial Intelligence” which rescinded President Biden’s Executive Order 14110 on AI in January, with the purpose of removing barriers to American AI innovation and retain global leadership by the United States in AI. Likewise, the AI Action Plan asserts that AI is too vital to “smother in bureaucracy” at this stage of development, whether at the state or federal level. To address this concern, the AI Action Plan recommends several policy actions to reduce regulatory barriers:
Ensuring Frontier AI Protects Free Speech and American Values
The AI Action Plan’s recommended policy actions include:
Encouraging Open-Source and Open-Weight AI
Recognizing that decisions on whether and how to release an open or closed model is fundamentally up to the developer, the Action Plan advocates for creating a supportive environment for open models. Recommended policy actions include:
Supporting Next-Generation Manufacturing
The AI Action Plan calls for strategic federal investment in emerging technologies such as autonomous drones, self-driving cars, and robotics. Recommended policy actions include:
Protecting Commercial and Government AI Innovations
The Action Plan states that to preserve American leadership in AI, the federal government must work closely with industry to appropriately balance the dissemination of cutting-edge AI technologies with national security interests. The federal government must also effectively address security risks to U.S. AI companies, talent, intellectual property, and systems. Recommended policy actions include the federal government partnering with leading American AI developers to enable the private sector to actively protect AI innovations from security risks, including malicious cyber actors, insider threats, and others.
Combat Synthetic Media in the Legal System
The AI Action Plan highlights the growing threat posed by malicious deepfakes, whether by audio recordings, videos, or photos. While President Trump signed the TAKE IT DOWN Act on May 20, 2025, to protect against sexually explicit, non-consensual deepfakes, the AI Action Plan emphasizes further action is needed. Recommended policy actions include:
The AI Action Plan identifies certain conditions necessary to build American AI infrastructure. These include streamlining permitting for data centers, semiconductor manufacturing facilities, and energy infrastructure while guaranteeing security; restoring American semiconductor manufacturing; bolstering critical infrastructure cybersecurity; and promoting mature federal capacity for AI incident response.
Streamlining Permitting for AI Infrastructure While Ensuring Security
The Trump Administration recognizes that AI requires new infrastructure, i.e., factories to produce chips, data centers to run those chips, and new sources of energy to power it all, and believes “America’s environmental permitting system and other regulations make it almost impossible to build this infrastructure” in the United States at the pace required.
Recommended policy actions include:
Restoring American Semiconductor Manufacturing
The AI Action Plan emphasizes the importance of bringing semiconductor manufacturing back to the United States. Recommended policy actions include:
Strengthening Cybersecurity for Critical Infrastructure
According to the AI Action Plan, “[a]s AI systems advance in coding and software engineering capabilities, their utility as tools of both cyber offense and defense will expand. . . . All use of AI in safety-critical or homeland security applications should entail the use of secure-by-design, robust, and resilient AI systems that are instrumented to detect performance shifts, and alert to potential malicious activities like data poisoning or adversarial example attacks.” Recommended policy actions include:
Promoting Mature Federal Capacity for AI Incident Response
The AI Action Plan calls for the federal government to promote the development and incorporation of AI Incident Response actions into existing incident response doctrine and best-practices for both the public and private sectors. Recommended policy actions include:
The AI Action Plan outlines seven key conditions the Administration believes are needed to position the United States as the global leader in AI diplomacy and security. These include: exporting American AI to allies and partners; countering Chinese influence in international governance bodies; strengthening enforcement of AI compute export controls; closing loopholes in existing semiconductor manufacturing export controls; aligning global protection measures; ensuring the United States is at the forefront of evaluating national security risks in frontier models; and investing in biosecurity.
Exporting American AI to Allies and Partners
To meet global demand for AI and stop U.S. allies from becoming dependent on foreign adversary technology, the AI Action Plan proposes exporting the U.S.’s full AI technology stack—hardware, models, software, applications, and standards—to all countries willing to join America’s AI alliance. The Trump Administration plans to establish and operationalize a program within the Department of Commerce (DOC) aimed at gathering proposals from industry consortia for full-stack AI export packages. Once consortia are selected by Commerce, the Economic Diplomacy Action Group, the U.S. Trade and Development Agency, the Export-Import Bank, the U.S. International Development Finance Corporation, and the Department of State should coordinate with Commerce to facilitate deals that meet U.S.-approved security requirements and standards.
Countering Chinese Influence in International Governance Bodies
The AI Action Plan calls on the United States to work with like-minded countries to encourage the development of AI in line with their shared values. The AI Action Plan criticizes many existing international AI governance initiatives as advocating for burdensome regulations, “codes of conduct” that promote “cultural agendas that do not align with American values,” or are influenced by Chinese companies attempting to shape standards for facial recognition and surveillance. The Administration intends to “vigorously advocate for international AI governance approaches that promote innovation, reflect American values, and counter authoritarian influence.”
Strengthening Enforcement of AI Compute Export Controls
The Administration plans to strengthen enforcement of AI compute export controls by:
Closing Loopholes in Semiconductor Manufacturing Export Controls
To preserve U.S. leadership in semiconductor innovation and prevent adversaries from exploiting American innovations to their own ends in ways that undermine U.S. national security, the AI Action Plan calls for new measures to address gaps in semiconductor manufacturing export controls, coupled with enhanced enforcement. The AI Action Plan calls for the development of new export controls on semiconductor manufacturing sub-systems.
Aligning Global Protection Measures
U.S. partners and allies should be encouraged to follow U.S. controls and not “backfill.” If they do, the United States should use tools such as the Foreign Direct Product Rule and secondary tariffs to achieve greater international alignment. Recommended policy actions include:
Ensuring the U.S. Government is at the Forefront of Evaluating National Security Risks in Frontier Models
Recommended policy actions include:
Investing in Biosecurity
According to the AI Action Plan, “AI will unlock nearly limitless potential in biology: cures for new diseases, novel industrial use cases, and more. At the same time, it could create new pathways for malicious actors to synthesize harmful pathogens and other biomolecules.” The AI Action Plan advocates for a multi-tiered approach designed to screen for malicious actors, along with new tools and infrastructure for more effective screening. Recommended Policy Actions include:
Preventing Woke AI in the Federal Government
This Executive Order directs agency heads to procure only large language models (LLMs) that adhere to “Unbiased AI Principles,” described as: (1) truth-seeking: the LLMs must be truthful and prioritize historical accuracy, scientific inquiry, and objectivity, and acknowledge uncertainty where reliable information is incomplete or contradictory; and (2) ideological neutrality: the LLMs must be neutral, nonpartisan tools that do not manipulate responses in favor of “ideological dogmas like DEI,” and developers will not intentionally encode partisan or ideological judgments into an LLM’s outputs unless those judgments are prompted by or readily accessible to the end user. See the White House Fact Sheet on this Executive Order.
Accelerating Federal Permitting of Data Center Infrastructure
This Executive Order, among other things: (1) directs the Secretary of Commerce to launch an initiative to provide financial support, such as loans, grants, and tax incentives, for select projects; and (2) repeals Biden EO 14141, which imposed climate-related conditions on the construction of AI data centers on federal lands. See the White House Fact Sheet on this Executive Order.
Promoting the Export of the American AI Technology Stack
This Executive Order requires the Secretary of Commerce to establish and implement the American AI Exports Program to support the development and deployment of U.S. full-stack AI export packages, which include hardware, data systems, AI models, cybersecurity measures, applications for sectors such as healthcare, education, agriculture, and transportation. See the White House Fact Sheet on this Executive Order.
Additional information can be found at AI.Gov. Read the White House press release.




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