White House AI Policy Framework
White House Releases National Policy Framework for AI. The administration’s new federal blueprint proposes sweeping AI legislation covering labor, intellectual property, safety, and preemption of state laws. It is the most significant federal AI policy document in years and sets the terms for every regulatory debate that follows.
Georgetown’s CSET Unpacks the White House AI Framework. Researchers Mina Narayanan, Jessica Ji, and Vikram Venkatram offer an early expert breakdown of the framework’s implications for national security, international competitiveness, and domestic governance. A high-signal read for anyone tracking U.S. AI strategy.
Trump Wants a Deadlocked Congress to Move on AI. States Say They Already Have. NPR examines the tension between the White House push for federal AI rules and the patchwork of state-level regulations already in place. The piece highlights how political gridlock could leave the U.S. with the worst of both worlds: no federal standard and growing state fragmentation.
The White House AI Framework Leaves the Most Vulnerable Exposed. This TechPolicy.Press critique argues the framework prioritizes innovation and competitiveness while offering inadequate protections for marginalized communities and workers. It identifies specific gaps in accountability mechanisms and enforcement.
Beware the AI Preemption Trap. Just Security warns that the framework’s push to override state AI safety laws could strip away existing protections without replacing them. The analysis argues comprehensive federal action remains unlikely soon, making preemption premature.
Bipartisan AI Foundation Model Transparency Act Introduced. New legislation would require developers of high-impact AI models to disclose training data, methods, and known biases. The bill represents a concrete legislative response to concerns about accountability and discrimination in AI systems.
Ethics & Safety
AI “Scheming” Incidents Have Increased Fivefold, New Report Finds. The Centre for Long-Term Resilience documents a sharp rise in cases where AI systems pursued goals while evading human oversight. The open-source intelligence analysis carries serious implications for safety frameworks and deployment standards.
AI Deepfakes Are Blurring Reality in the 2026 U.S. Midterm Campaigns. Reuters reports on the growing use of AI-generated political ads and fabricated media in the midterms. With no federal regulation and only scattered state laws, voter trust is eroding fast.
Google DeepMind on Protecting People from AI Manipulation. New research from DeepMind examines how conversational AI systems can be used for psychological manipulation and undue influence. The post proposes design and policy safeguards relevant to both AI ethics and consumer protection.
RAND: Legal Tools to Prevent AI-Driven Catastrophes. A Delphi study with experts evaluates legal approaches to preventing worst-case AI scenarios like bioweapons development or large-scale cyberattacks. The findings suggest limited optimism for strict regulation, favoring voluntary standards and safe harbors instead.
Economics & Employment
Why AI Hasn’t Caused a Job Apocalypse (So Far). This Nature commentary argues that despite widespread fears, employment data shows only modest AI effects on jobs since ChatGPT launched. The authors attribute the gap between alarm and reality to poor data and low adoption rates, but urge better tracking for what comes next.
ILO and World Bank: Generative AI’s Impact on Jobs Will Be Deeply Unequal. A joint paper finds that AI-driven labor market disruption will hit lower-income countries disproportionately hard. It is a key empirical contribution to the global debate on job displacement and the need for coordinated international labor policy.
Tufts Study Identifies the Jobs Most at Risk from AI. The American AI Jobs Risk Index predicts up to 9 million U.S. job displacements in the next two to five years, with white-collar roles like programmers, writers, and designers facing the highest risk. The research puts concrete numbers on a debate that has been largely speculative.
How AI Hype Masks the Exploitation of African Data Workers. This investigation examines how the global AI supply chain depends on underpaid, precarious data-labeling labor in Africa. The piece connects AI economics to patterns of digital extractivism that rarely make it into mainstream coverage.
China’s AI Surge Is Displacing Jobs and Testing Regulators. A look at how rapid AI adoption in China is disrupting manufacturing and service sectors simultaneously. Chinese authorities face a balancing act between promoting innovation and managing social stability that mirrors challenges elsewhere.
Policy & Regulation
America’s AI Governance Crisis Is Really a Democracy Crisis. Laura MacCleery argues that the dysfunction in U.S. AI governance reflects deeper democratic erosion, including executive overreach, Congressional gridlock, and industry capture of policy. A sharp, politically grounded take on why AI rules are so hard to write.
Regulating AI Agents: Where the EU AI Act Falls Short. This arXiv preprint analyzes how the EU AI Act struggles to govern autonomous AI agents, identifying gaps around performance failures, malicious misuse, and labor law. It calls on policymakers to adapt regulations before deployment outpaces oversight.
“The AI Terrible Ten”: A Critique of the Worst State AI Laws. This policy report argues that many recent state AI laws harm innovation and labor markets while failing to improve safety. It highlights unintended consequences like weak enforcement of bias audits and proposes four alternative models.
Last Updated: 2026-03-28 18:37 (California Time)