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The White House and Republicans Are Still at Odds on AI

While speaking at the Hill and Valley Forum in Washington, D.C., last week White House AI czar David Sacks described the guiding principles behind the administration’s approach to technology and child safety. “Our North Star on that issue has been parental empowerment—we want to ultimately allow parents to decide what’s right for their children.” 

Sacks, who is now stepping aside from his role as AI czar but will continue to advise the Trump White House, emphasized that critiques suggesting that such an approach may place too much burden on parents are “nonsensical. … This is what it means to be a parent. Do you want the government to decide what kids should see?” 

The discussion came days after the White House released a four-page AI policy framework outlining the administration’s recommendations for what a single national rulebook governing AI might look like—including guidance on child safety. The White House hopes a national framework will swiftly pass through Congress and preempt state legislation, heading off its fears of a regulatory patchwork that could hinder AI innovation. 

But divisions within the Republican Party over how to address child safety risks may only become more bitter, and could threaten to unravel the coalition needed to produce the national AI framework the White House is hoping for.

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