WASHINGTON –Β An artificial intelligence agenda that started coalescing on the podcasts ofΒ Silicon Valley billionairesΒ is now being forged into U.S. policy as President Donald Trump leans on the ideas of theΒ tech figuresΒ who backed his election campaign.
The White House on Wednesday revealed theΒ βAI Action PlanβΒ Trump ordered after returning to the White House in January. Trump gave his tech advisers six months to come up with new AI policies after revoking President Joe Biden’sΒ signature AI guardrailsΒ on his first day in office.
The unveiling is co-hosted by the bipartisan Hill and Valley Forum and the All-In Podcast, a business and technology show hosted by four tech investors and entrepreneurs who include Trumpβs AI czar, David Sacks.
The plan includes some familiar tech lobby pitches. That includes accelerating the sale of AI technology abroad and making it easier to construct theΒ energy-hungry data center buildingsΒ that are needed to form and run AI products. It also includes some of the AI culture war preoccupations of the circle of venture capitalists who endorsed Trump last year.
Blocking βideological biasβ
Countering the liberal bias they see in AI chatbots such as ChatGPT or Google’s Gemini has long been a rallying point for the tech industry’s loudest Trump backers.
Trumpβs plan seeks to block the government from contracting with tech companies unless they βensure that their systems are objective and free from top-down ideological bias.” A Biden-era framework for evaluating the riskiest AI applications should also be stripped of any references to βmisinformation, Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion, and climate change,β the plan said.
Sacks, a former PayPal executive and now Trump’s top AI adviser, has been criticizing βwoke AIβ for more than a year, fueled by Google’s February 2024 rollout of an AI image generator that, when asked to show an American Founding Father, created pictures of Black, Asian and Native American men.
βThe AIβs incapable of giving you accurate answers because itβs been so programmed with diversity and inclusion,β Sacks said at the time.
Google quickly fixed its tool, but the βBlack George Washingtonβ moment remained a parable for the problem of AI’s perceived political bias, taken up by X owner Elon Musk, venture capitalist Marc Andreessen, Vice President JD Vance and Republican lawmakers.
The Trump administrationβs latest push against βwoke AIβ comes a week after the Pentagon announced new $200 million contracts with four leading AI companies, including Google, to address βcritical national security challenges.β
Also receiving one of the contracts was Muskβs xAI, which has been pitched as an alternative to βwoke AIβ companies. The company has faced its own challenges: Earlier this month, xAI had to scramble to remove posts made by its Grok chatbot thatΒ made antisemitic commentsΒ and praised Adolf Hitler.
Streamlining AI data center permits
The plan aims to speed up permitting and loosen environmental regulation to accelerate construction on new data centers and factories and the power sources to fuel them. It condemns βradical climate dogmaβ and recommends lifting a number of environmental restrictions, including clean air and water laws.
Trump has previously paired AI’s need for huge amounts of electricity with his own push to tap into U.S. energy sources, including gas, coal and nuclear.
Many tech giants are already well on their way toward building new data centers in the U.S. and around the world. OpenAI announced this week that it has switched on the first phase of a massive data center complex in Abilene, Texas, part of an Oracle-backed project known as Stargate that Trump promoted earlier this year. Amazon, Microsoft, Meta and xAI also have major projects underway.
The tech industry has pushed for easier permitting rules to get its computing facilities connected to power, but the AI building boom has also contributed to spiking demand for fossil fuel production that will contribute to global warming.
United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on Tuesday called on the worldβs major tech firms toΒ power data centers completely with renewablesΒ by 2030.
βA typical AI data center eats up as much electricity as 100,000 homes,β Guterres said. βBy 2030, data centers could consume as much electricity as all of Japan does today.β
The plan includes a strategy to disincentivize states from aggressively regulating AI technology. It recommends that federal agencies βconsider a stateβs AI regulatory climate when making funding decisions and limit funding if the stateβs AI regulatory regimes may hinder the effectiveness of that funding or award.β
Trump’s Repubican administration had supported a different proposal in Congress to block states from passing any AI laws for 10 years, but the Senate defeated it earlier this month.
Who benefits from Trump’s AI action plan
There are sharp debates on how to regulate AI, even among the influential venture capitalists who have been debating it on their favorite medium: the podcast.
While some Trump backers, particularly Andreessen, have advocated an βaccelerationistβ approach that aims to speed up AI advancement with minimal regulation, Sacks has described himself as taking a middle road of techno-realism.
βTechnology is going to happen. Trying to stop it is like ordering the tides to stop. If we donβt do it, somebody else will,β Sacks said on the βAll-Inβ podcast.
On Tuesday, more than 100 groups including labor unions, parent groups, environmental justice organizations and privacy advocates signed a resolution opposing Trumpβs embrace of industry-driven AI policy and calling for a βPeopleβs AI Action Planβ that would βdeliver first and foremost for the American people.β
Amba Kak, co-executive director of the AI Now Institute, which helped lead the effort, said the coalition expects Trumpβs plan to come βstraight from Big Techβs mouth.β
βEvery time we say, βWhat about our jobs, our air, water, our children?β theyβre going to say, βBut what about China?ββ she said in a call with reporters Tuesday. She said Americans should reject the White Houseβs argument that the industry is overregulated and fight to preserve βbaseline protections for the publicβ as AI technology advances.