Trump To Release AI Action Plan To Let US Win AI Race

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In Summary

  • Media reports suggest the document will likely mark a split from Biden administration policies
  • Plan will include faster permitting for building AI data centers to more use of AI at the Pentagon
  • Action plan will likely discuss the ease of exporting AI technology abroad and reducing barriers to development in US
  • OpenAI CEO Sam Altman said his company now has lots of government work.


Catenaa, Wednesday, July 23, 2025- US President Donald Trump is expected to release an AI action plan on Wednesday that reportedly outlines how the US can win in the global race to develop artificial intelligence.

Media reports suggest the document will likely mark a split from Biden administration policies, which favored restrictions against exports of AI chips and steps to ensure AI was not used to spread misinformation.

The White House, according to a Reuters report that cited a summary of the draft action plan, will likely discuss how to make it easier to export AI technology abroad and reduce barriers to its development in the US.

That may include everything from faster permitting for building AI data centers to more use of AI at the Pentagon to identifying which federal regulations slow down AI and even withholding federal funding from states with tough AI laws already in place.

Trump is expected to discuss the topic during a speech at a Wednesday event titled “Winning the AI Race,” organized by White House AI and crypto czar David Sacks and his co-hosts on the “All-In” podcast.

The strategy announcement from the White House is the outcome of an order Trump signed in his first week that asked for an AI action plan to “sustain and enhance America’s global AI dominance to promote human flourishing, economic competitiveness, and national security.”

Some executive orders are also expected this week, according to Axios and the Wall Street Journal, that would promote the exports of chips and AI technology to countries considered friendly to the US.

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman said Tuesday at a Federal Reserve banking conference in Washington, D.C., that his company now has lots of government work.

“We are increasingly working with the government to roll out our services to lots of government employees,” Altman said.

If such an AI order is issued and then challenged, a court fight is likely to resemble those in multiple ongoing lawsuits against two other DEI-focused executive orders issued by Trump during his first days back in office.

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