Trump announces U.S. AI Action Plan. Here are 3 major takeaways.

On Wednesday morning, President Donald Trump unveiled the highly anticipated AI action plan.
The decree focuses on three main areas, or pillars designed to ensure American domination of AI and promote economic progress at the national level.
As expected, the executive decree includes regulations targeting technological companies described as “expensive” and “bureaucratic” administrative formalities, includes many provisions on the enlargement of AI infrastructure in the country, and presents a case to establish the technology of the American AI as the global standard for “countries sharing the same ideas” compared to adversaries like China.
The long and wide document is that the balls will be the subject of an in -depth analysis for the coming days, but there are several key policies that stand out immediately.
Trump wants “anti-alarm” AI and control of state AI regulation
In the document, the Trump administration orders federal agencies to work with companies developing large -language models (LLM) border which “guarantee that their systems are objective and exempt from descending ideological biases”, which is the formal means of addressing the models of AI deemed too liberal or “awakened”. The announcement requires that “AI systems must be free from ideological biases and be designed to continue the objective truth rather than social engineering programs when users are looking for information or a factual analysis.”
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As part of the acceleration of AI development, the decree also directs the management and budget office (OMB) to restrict federal financing of states whose regulations “can hinder the efficiency of this funding or this price”.
Data centers could be built on public land
The executive order plan also concentrates AI infrastructure and increasing AI manufacturing in the United States, including building data centers, access facilitation to permits by deregulating certain environmental standards and increasing relevant workforce such as electricians and HVAC technicians.
This section also includes an alarming recommendation on the use of federal land available for the manufacture of data centers.
Trump wants to tighten access to American AI technology
A major pillar of the plan focuses on promoting American AI technology abroad. “The United States Must Meet Global Demand for Ai by Exporting its Full ai Technology Stack – Hardware, Models, Software, Applications, and Standards – TO all Countries Willing To Join America’s Ai Alliance. The Executive Order Also Directs The Department of Commerce (DOC), The Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) Security Council (NSC) to Strengthen Export Control of Valuable Chips to make sure they do wind up in “Countries of concern.”
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Elsewhere, the ordinance directs the federal agencies focused on work and the interior economy, to “study the impact of AI on the labor market” and create recycling programs for workers affected by the replacement of AI jobs.
Little discussion in the political world so far, the announcements discuss the sometimes subjective and insufficient assessments of AI models. Rigorous assessments can be an essential tool to define and measure the reliability and performance of AI in regulated industries, “said the order.” Over time, regulators should explore the use of evaluations in their application of existing law to AI systems. “”
There is a lot to unpack here and even more to assess how the mandates of these mandates take place. Stay listening for more than our cover on what it means for the AI industry and its broader impact on our world.
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Artificial Intelligence Donald Trump



