President Trump Postpones Signing of AI Executive Order

President Donald Trump delayed the signing of a planned executive order on artificial intelligence, citing concerns that it could hinder U.S. innovation and its competitive lead over China. The proposed order reportedly included provisions for government access to and evaluation of new AI models before their public release.
President Trump Postpones Signing of AI Executive Order

President Trump Postpones Signing of AI Executive Order President Donald Trump’s last-minute decision to postpone a sweeping artificial intelligence executive order has exposed deep divisions over how far Washington should go in overseeing cutting‑edge AI models.

The plan first surfaced earlier in the week, when reporting described a forthcoming White House order on “cybersecurity and AI safety” that would strengthen protections for national security systems and critical infrastructure while creating a framework for early government access to powerful “frontier” AI models. In its draft form, the order envisioned a voluntary system under which AI labs would alert the government about advanced models and share them up to 90 days before public release, allowing federal agencies and key infrastructure providers to test for security vulnerabilities.

By Thursday, expectations were set for a high-profile signing ceremony with leading tech and AI CEOs. But hours before the event, internal disagreements and pushback from influential advisers and industry figures helped derail the rollout. Some in Trump’s orbit, including AI adviser David Sacks, argued the order was unnecessary and reflected the agenda of AI “doomers,” while Trump himself was described as fundamentally hostile to new regulation.

Publicly, Trump framed the delay as a defense of U.S. technological dominance. He told reporters he “didn’t like certain aspects” of the order and warned it “could have been a blocker,” stressing that the U.S. is “leading China” in AI and that he did not want to jeopardize that lead or the “tremendous good” and jobs he said AI was creating.

Supporters of AI safeguards, who had welcomed signs the administration would finally move on AI and cybersecurity, are now unsure whether any order will materialize, or in what form. For the moment, the accelerationist camp favoring light-touch oversight has prevailed, leaving the core tension unresolved between rapid innovation and pre‑release government scrutiny of powerful AI systems.

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