📅 Federal AI Policy Timeline
Every major federal AI policy event from 2023 to present.
NIST AI Risk Management Framework Released
The National Institute of Standards and Technology publishes its AI Risk Management Framework (AI RMF 1.0), providing voluntary guidance for managing AI risks throughout the AI lifecycle.
Senate AI Insight Forums Begin
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer launches a series of bipartisan AI Insight Forums, bringing together tech CEOs, civil society leaders, and experts to discuss AI regulation.
White House Voluntary AI Commitments
Seven leading AI companies — Amazon, Anthropic, Google, Inflection, Meta, Microsoft, and OpenAI — agree to voluntary safety commitments at the White House, including watermarking AI content and sharing safety test results.
Biden Executive Order 14110 on Safe AI
President Biden signs the landmark Executive Order on the Safe, Secure, and Trustworthy Development and Use of Artificial Intelligence. The sweeping order directs federal agencies to establish AI safety standards, requires developers of powerful AI systems to share safety test results with the government, and tasks NIST with developing guidelines for red-teaming AI models.
UK AI Safety Summit at Bletchley Park
The UK hosts the first global AI Safety Summit, producing the Bletchley Declaration signed by 28 countries including the US, agreeing on the need to manage AI risks cooperatively.
FTC Investigates AI Surveillance Pricing
The FTC orders eight companies to provide information about their AI-powered 'surveillance pricing' practices, examining whether AI tools are being used to set discriminatory consumer prices.
EU AI Act Formally Adopted
The European Parliament approves the EU AI Act, the world's first comprehensive AI regulation. The law categorizes AI systems by risk level and imposes strict requirements on high-risk applications.
Utah AI Policy Act Signed
Utah Governor Spencer Cox signs SB 149, the Artificial Intelligence Policy Act, making Utah one of the first states to enact comprehensive AI legislation. The law creates the AI Learning Laboratory Program and establishes disclosure requirements.
Colorado SB24-205 Signed Into Law
Colorado Governor Jared Polis signs SB24-205, the Consumer Protections for Artificial Intelligence act, making Colorado the first state to enact a comprehensive AI consumer protection law. The law requires impact assessments for high-risk AI systems and mandates disclosure when AI is used in consequential decisions.
Tennessee ELVIS Act Takes Effect
Tennessee's Ensuring Likeness Voice and Image Security Act takes effect, becoming the first state law specifically protecting individuals' voice and likeness from unauthorized AI replication.
California Governor Vetoes SB 1047
Governor Gavin Newsom vetoes SB 1047, the Safe and Secure Innovation for Frontier Artificial Intelligence Models Act, arguing it could drive AI companies out of California and that the bill's broad scope could stifle innovation. The veto is celebrated by tech companies and criticized by AI safety advocates.
California AI Transparency Act Signed
Governor Newsom signs SB 942, the California AI Transparency Act, requiring AI systems to provide watermarks and detection tools for AI-generated content. Effective August 2, 2026.
NIST Publishes AI Content Provenance Standards
NIST releases guidelines for AI content provenance and watermarking, establishing technical standards for identifying AI-generated text, images, and audio.
2024 Presidential Election
Donald Trump wins the 2024 presidential election, signaling a major shift in federal AI policy away from the Biden administration's regulatory approach toward a deregulatory, industry-friendly stance.
Trump Takes Office
Donald Trump is inaugurated as the 47th President of the United States. His administration signals a dramatically different approach to AI policy, prioritizing American competitiveness and innovation over regulation.
Trump EO 14179: "Removing Barriers to American Leadership in AI"
President Trump signs Executive Order 14179, revoking Biden's EO 14110 on AI safety. The order directs agencies to remove regulatory barriers to AI development and frames AI policy around maintaining American dominance in the technology. It eliminates the Biden-era requirement for AI developers to share safety test results with the government.
NIST AI Risk Management Framework Update
NIST releases an updated AI Risk Management Framework reflecting the new administration's priorities, emphasizing voluntary standards and industry self-regulation over prescriptive requirements.
Senate Commerce Committee AI Hearing
The Senate Commerce Committee holds hearings on federal AI policy, with testimony from major AI companies. Industry leaders advocate for a unified federal approach to preempt the growing patchwork of state AI laws.
FTC Issues AI Marketing Guidance
The FTC releases updated guidance on AI marketing claims, warning companies against overstating AI capabilities and requiring clear disclosures when AI is used in consumer-facing applications.
Trump AI Action Plan Released
The White House releases a comprehensive AI Action Plan focused on reducing regulatory barriers, accelerating government AI adoption, increasing energy availability for AI data centers, and maintaining US leadership over China in AI development.
Colorado Delays SB24-205 Implementation
Colorado Governor Polis signs legislation delaying the implementation of SB24-205 from February 1, 2026 to June 30, 2026, citing concerns from businesses about compliance readiness and the need for additional rulemaking.
DOJ AI Enforcement Actions
The Department of Justice announces its first enforcement actions targeting AI-enabled fraud, focusing on deepfake scams and AI-generated misinformation used in financial crimes.
Bipartisan AI Innovation Act Introduced
A bipartisan group of senators introduces the AI Innovation and Safety Act, attempting to establish a federal framework for AI governance that would preempt some state laws while setting baseline safety standards.
Trump EO 14365: "Ensuring a National Policy Framework for AI"
President Trump signs Executive Order 14365, directing federal agencies to review state AI laws that may conflict with the national interest. The order signals strong federal preemption of state AI regulations, tasks the Commerce Department with identifying state laws that burden AI development, and sets a 90-day review period culminating in a March 2026 deadline.
Multiple State AI Laws Take Effect
Several state AI laws go into effect on January 1, 2026, including new requirements in Illinois, Connecticut, and Virginia for AI transparency, algorithmic impact assessments, and automated decision-making disclosures.
"AI and the Great Divergence" Report Published
A major policy report titled 'AI and the Great Divergence' documents the growing gap between restrictive and permissive states, warning that the patchwork of state regulations is creating compliance nightmares for companies and potentially driving AI innovation to less-regulated jurisdictions.
78 Chatbot Bills Filed in 27 States
By mid-February 2026, 78 bills targeting AI chatbots have been introduced across 27 state legislatures, covering topics from mandatory disclosure requirements to age verification, child safety protections, and liability for chatbot-generated advice.
1,561 AI Bills Across 45 States
The total count of AI-related bills introduced in state legislatures reaches 1,561 across 45 states, marking a 68% increase over the same period in 2025 and underscoring the explosive growth of state-level AI regulation.
FTC/Commerce Deadline on State AI Law Review
The Commerce Department and FTC reach their 90-day deadline set by Trump's December 2025 executive order to review state AI laws. The agencies release a report identifying 47 state laws they recommend for federal preemption, setting up a legal and political battle between state and federal regulators.
Anthropic Sues Trump Administration
Anthropic files a lawsuit challenging the Trump administration's decision to blacklist the company from certain government AI contracts, arguing the decision was politically motivated and violated due process protections.
Q1 2026 Lobbying Disclosures Filed
Q1 2026 lobbying disclosures reveal record AI industry spending. Meta leads at $7.1M, followed by Amazon ($4.4M), Google ($2.9M), Microsoft ($2.8M), and Nvidia ($2.1M). Anthropic outspends OpenAI for the first time at $1.6M vs $1.5M.
Senate Judiciary AI Subcommittee Markup
The Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Privacy, Technology, and the Law begins markup of the Algorithmic Accountability Act, a bill that would require companies to conduct impact assessments for automated decision systems. Industry groups mobilize opposition.