Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) at the U.S. Capitol Building on October 27, 2025 in Washington, DC.Anna Moneymaker/Getty ImagesA proposal from President Donald Trump to bar U.S. states from regulating AI companies has come up against some surprising opposition: his own political party.
Gov. Ron DeSantis, Sen. Josh Hawley, Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders, and other prominent Republicans say Trump has abandoned his oft-mentioned base in favor of Big Tech companies that want to remove barriers to the highly lucrative AI boom.
The White House is reportedly mulling an executive order that would “potentially withhold federal funds from states who attempt to pass AI laws,”
according to a Financial Times report.
The move comes as the administration presses for a federal framework for AI and grapples with issues that would be influenced by the executive order.
Among them: Anxiety about AI-related
white collar job losses among the
Fortune 500, concerns about AI chatbots and mental health, and bipartisan support for online child safety laws that AI has exacerbated.
“Sneaking it into the defense bill is an insult to voters,” DeSantis
wrote on social media. “Drop the preemption plan now and protect our kids and communities,” Sanders
wrote.
That’s not to say Trump doesn’t have support in certain corners of his party.
Sen. Ted Cruz has been a vocal proponent. House Majority Leader Steve Scalise floated the idea of tacking it onto a defense bill. And Rep. Jay Obernolte, who has put a great deal of energy toward all things AI, said he believes it’s not within states’ jurisdiction to regulate the technology.
“Congress needs to get its act together,” he said in May.
—AN