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Artificial Intelligence

Will Trump Embrace the AI Future or Succumb to His Protectionist Impulses?

Trump and Biden both backed trade restrictions that ultimately lead to higher prices for the computer chips necessary to power artificial intelligence.

Jack Nicastro | From the March 2025 issue

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A pixelated photo of Donald Trump | Illustration: Joanna Andreasson Source image: Gage Skidmore
(Illustration: Joanna Andreasson Source image: Gage Skidmore)

President Donald Trump's deregulatory impulses could be a boon to the AI industry, but his hostility to free trade threatens to undermine its progress. Policies from the first Trump administration and caustic campaign rhetoric caution against unqualified optimism.

Former President Joe Biden's October 2023 Executive Order on the Safe, Secure, and Trustworthy Development and Use of Artificial Intelligence invoked the Defense Production Act, requiring companies to report their models to the federal government—a move Neil Chilson, head of AI policy at the Abundance Institute, sees as emblematic of the Biden administration's emphasis on AI's potential risks over its benefits. Marc Scribner, senior policy analyst at Reason Foundation (the nonprofit that publishes Reason), predicts Trump will revoke this executive order and move away from Biden's precautionary approach to federal AI regulation.

This light-touch approach was on display in a February 2019 Trump executive order, which aimed "to sustain and enhance the scientific, technological, and economic leadership position of the United States in AI." In November 2020, the Office of Management and Budget published a memorandum that clarified that "agencies must avoid a precautionary approach that holds AI systems to an impossibly high standard." Chilson says that the previous Trump administration's "orientation towards advanced computing and AI was one of optimism" and celebrated Trump's appointment of David Sacks, partner at the software-focused venture capital firm Craft Ventures, as the White House AI and cryptocurrency czar. Sacks' pro-AI stance is seconded by venture capitalist Sriram Krishnan, who will serve as senior policy adviser for AI at the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy.

But Trump's actions during his first term tell another story. His history of aggressive antitrust policy, including lawsuits against Facebook and Google, and his nomination of Gail Slater to head the Justice Department's antitrust division, suggest an animus toward the tech industry, which could stifle AI. Trump's nomination of Mark Meador to the Federal Trade Commission is still worse news for Big Tech.

Protectionist trade policies also harm AI progress. The export controls promulgated by the first Trump administration were expanded under Biden and met with retaliatory tariffs that increase the cost of domestic chip production—chips necessary to power AI.

Another challenge is the tension between the dangers of one-size-fits-all federal regulation vs. a costly labyrinth of state regulations. Adam Thierer, a tech policy analyst at the free market R Street Institute, counts hundreds of state bills and dozens of laws related to AI's potential impact on elections, deepfakes, and online safety. This "mother of all patchworks for technocratic regulation" will continue in 2025, Thierer predicted at the Cato Institute's December AI Policy Forum.

A federal regulatory framework also faces obstacles. When it comes to passing narrowly tailored AI legislation to preempt states regulating according to the precautionary principle, Rep. Jay Obernolte (R–Calif.), chair of the House Bipartisan Task Force on AI, acknowledged in the Cato forum that "there is not a high degree of confidence in Congress acting."

This article originally appeared in print under the headline "The Future of AI in the Trump Administration."

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NEXT: Trump Praised His A.G. Pick for Reducing Opioid Overdoses. In Reality, Drug Deaths Surged Under Her Watch.

Jack Nicastro is an assistant editor at Reason.

Artificial IntelligenceTrump AdministrationDeregulationRegulationTechnologyInformation TechnologyDonald TrumpInnovation
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  1. Vernon Depner   5 months ago

    emphasis on AI's potential risks over its benefits.

    Since the "potential risks" include the extinction of the human race, a little caution is warranted.

    1. mad.casual   5 months ago

      Not to defend Biden in the least, but reticence in embracing a technology that he won't be around to fully enjoy or defend against, erring against the risks, is not imprudence, it's the moral decision (again, not that he is/was cognitive of any of this).

      The AI Crusades and Reformation are not going to be fun.

      1. Wizard4169   5 months ago

        If cavemen had used the precautionary principle we'd still be arguing over this new-fangled "fire" thingie.

  2. With Trump in, "now Lord you can let your servant go in peace"   5 months ago

    YOu should have learned in Logic class: Never makek your argument hinge on a false dichotomy. you can oppose/ support AI and be protectionist/ non-protectionist.

    My work duties have involved me in the Biden Chip Act --- and it is a hugely costly , counter-productive failure like so much he did.

    1. But SkyNet is a Private Company   5 months ago

      That’s all Treason does anymore

  3. M L   5 months ago

    Income taxes lead to higher prices as well (corporate), and they take lots of money away from Americans. Higher prices for chips is not as bad as the government taking a huge portion of my paycheck.

  4. Sevo, 5-30-24, embarrassment   5 months ago

    Will Nicastro recover, or will he remain a TDS-addled steaming pile of shit?

    1. Wizard4169   5 months ago

      The guy is giving Trump way more credit and benefit of the doubt than he deserves, but nothing short of full-on Trump-sucking is good enough, I guess.

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