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White House AI Framework Targets 50-State Patchwork as Crypto Firms Slash Jobs for Machines

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The White House on March 20 released a national AI policy framework with seven legislative pillars, urging Congress to preempt state-level AI regulations and establish a single federal standard.

The framework arrives one day after Crypto.com cut 12% of its workforce, citing enterprise-wide AI integration, and weeks after Block and Gemini made similar moves.

A Federal Standard Over 50 State Rules

Four states have already passed AI-specific legislation. Colorado, California, Utah, and Texas each set rules covering data collection, transparency, and private-sector AI use.

The White House framework calls those efforts a “patchwork” that threatens national competitiveness.

Michael Kratsios, Assistant to the President and Director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP), framed the urgency directly.

“We need one federal AI policy, not a 50 state patchwork. This gets us there,” he stated.

The framework explicitly states that states “should not be permitted to regulate AI development, because it is an inherently interstate phenomenon with key foreign policy and national security implications.”

However, it preserves state authority over zoning for AI infrastructure, procurement rules, and enforcement of general laws protecting children and consumers.

Today, the @WhiteHouse released a commonsense National AI Policy Framework that ensures every American benefits from AI.

As @POTUS has said — we need one federal AI policy, not a 50 state patchwork. This gets us there.

Eager to work with Congress on this important legislation. pic.twitter.com/flnv8cD0lP

— Director Michael Kratsios (@mkratsios47) March 20, 2026

The document recommends against creating any new federal rulemaking body. Instead, it pushes sector-specific oversight through existing regulators and industry-led standards, paired with regulatory sandboxes to accelerate deployment.

What the 7 Pillars Cover

Child safety leads the framework. The White House wants Congress to require age-assurance tools on AI platforms, give parents account and device controls, and mandate features that reduce risks of sexual exploitation and self-harm targeting minors. The document builds on the Take It Down Act signed earlier in the Trump administration.

On energy, the framework codifies the Ratepayer Protection Pledge. Congress would bar residential electricity customers from bearing the costs of new AI data center construction.

At the same time, it calls for streamlined federal permitting so data centers can develop on-site power generation.

One X user highlighted the energy provision, posting that ratepayer protection “isn’t talked about enough” and that many Americans still fear data centers will drive up their electric bills.

Ratepayer protection isn't talked about enough. Many people still believe these data centers will end up costing ratepayers with increased electric bills. pic.twitter.com/7KBP0ldcmL

— Dagnum P.I. (@Dagnum_PI) March 20, 2026

On intellectual property, the administration took a notable position. The framework states the White House believes AI training on copyrighted material “does not violate copyright laws” but supports letting courts settle the issue.

It also backs collective licensing frameworks so creators can negotiate compensation from AI providers without antitrust liability.

Free speech provisions target government censorship specifically. The framework would prevent federal agencies from coercing AI providers to suppress lawful political expression and give citizens a path to seek redress if agencies attempt to dictate AI platform content.

Crypto and Tech Firms Already Reshaping Workforces Around AI

The framework’s workforce pillar calls for expanded AI training programs and apprenticeships. That recommendation lands against a backdrop of aggressive AI-driven layoffs across crypto and tech.

Crypto.com cut roughly 180 employees on March 19. CEO Kris Marszalek said the company is “joining the list of companies integrating enterprise-wide AI” and warned that firms that “do not make this pivot immediately will fail.”

We are joining the list of companies integrating enterprise-wide AI. Companies that do not make this pivot immediately will fail. Companies that move slowly will be left behind. Companies that move immediately and pair the best AI tools with top-performers will achieve a level of…

— Kris | ai.com (@kris) March 19, 2026

Block slashed over 4,000 jobs in February, nearly 40% of its workforce. CEO Jack Dorsey tied the decision directly to AI, stating that “a significantly smaller team, using the tools we’re building, can do more.”

Gemini reduced headcount by roughly 30% since January 2026. Messari reorganized under new leadership with an AI-first mandate. The Algorand Foundation cut 25% of its staff.

Daniel Castro, Director of the Center for Data Innovation, called the White House framework “a serious, pragmatic, and pro-innovation blueprint” that “addresses genuine concerns while keeping the focus where it belongs.”

The @WhiteHouse has released its National Policy Framework for AI—offering Congress a clear, pro-innovation blueprint that targets real harms, supports adoption, & avoids a patchwork of state laws.

Our full statement from @Castrotech:https://t.co/VBGOQZ7V0c pic.twitter.com/EGBA36OpQQ

— Center for Data Innovation (@DataInnovation) March 20, 2026

However, child safety advocates flagged concerns that federal preemption could weaken state protections.

Daniel Cochrane of the Heritage Foundation warned that broad preemption could “endanger our kids and disable responsible AI governance.”

Whether Congress acts on the framework in 2026 depends on competing legislative priorities.

The CLARITY Act for stablecoins and broader digital asset market structure bills already compete for floor time.

Kratsios told reporters the administration wants legislation signed “this year, as fast as we can.”

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