Trump signs an executive order banning “woke AI” in the federal government. Sounds bold on paper. Dig into the language and it’s a mixture of political theater, selective enforcement, and an open door for regulatory arbitrage.
The order claims government AI must follow “truth-seeking,” “ideologically neutral” standards and be free from “diversity-driven distortions.” The White House says too many existing AI tools have “exhibited biased behavior, refused to present opposing viewpoints, or misrepresented factual history.” (WhiteHouse.gov)
This came alongside a broader AI “action plan” that’s quietly just as important. Trump’s team is rewarding states with the loosest AI rules by prioritizing them for federal contracts. That’s not a headline—it’s buried in the fine print. (FT.com)
Here’s what’s really going on beneath the culture war smoke:
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The order applies only to federal AI systems—not private companies
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Critics warn this sets up a race to the bottom on regulation
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The Guardian calls it “politically engineered AI governance”
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The Washington Post says Silicon Valley lobbyists helped shape the language behind the scenes
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FT confirms Musk’s allies got boxed out of the process entirely
So now “non-woke” AI is the new federal standard. But enforcement depends on who writes the training data. If you think that means “bias-free,” you’ve never seen a procurement contract.
Local tech leaders in Georgia and Ohio are raising alarm. One CTO told The Financial Times off record: “If this order forces us to cut safety checks to win contracts, it’s going to backfire.” That’s not political. That’s operational.