Texas Could Blow Its Shot at Leading the AI RevolutionNew Foto - Texas Could Blow Its Shot at Leading the AI Revolution

Texas is built for growth: It's got land, talent, and a deep-seated cultural bias toward building over banning. For this reason, companies like Tesla, Meta, and Nvidia arepouring billions into the state. The state was perfectly positioned to lead America's artificial intelligence (AI) revolution—until lawmakers nearly sent these companiesfleeingto other states. The original text of Texas House Bill 149—theTexas Responsible AI Governance Act (TRAIGA)—was a blueprint for how to kill innovation. Modeled after Europe's AI Act and former President Joe Biden's now-defunctAI Bill of Rights, it proposed audits, sweeping risk classifications, and vague compliance mandates that would've buried startups while big incumbents would not have been significantly hindered. It was regulation based on fear, not facts. But to their credit, Texas lawmakers course-corrected. On March 14, Rep. Giovanni Capriglione (R–Keller)introduced a revised versionof TRAIGA that ditched the open-ended audits, the broad "high-risk AI" definitions, and the compliance hurdles that would've applied equally to spam filters and autonomous vehicles. The new version reflected a growing realization: You can protect consumers without kneecapping innovators.The bill haspassed the Houseand is heading to the Senate—though so far has been left pending in committee.Even the substitute bill isn't perfect. H.B. 149 would create a new state AI council, impose heavy reporting mandates, andopen the door to mission creepwithout a clear limiting principle. It comes with a price tag north of $25 million and carves out roles for 20 new full-time state employees. Not exactly the small-government energy Texas wants to be known for. The Texas Senate has the chance to finish what the House started by tightening the bill's scope and guarding against bureaucratic bloat. Texas can lead in AI by scaling back bureaucracy, not building a regulatory empire. Simple fixes could get this bill across the finish line: sunset the AI Council by 2030 unless renewed by the Texas legislature, cap the budget, exempt open-source and small businesses from enforcement overreach, and tie enforcement to actual consumer harm rather than theoretical risks. Virginia already nailed this. Just 10 days after the revised Texas bill was introduced, RepublicanGov. Glenn Youngkin vetoed H.B. 2094, a similarly heavy-handed AI bill. His message was clear—the legislation would stifle job creation, repel business investment, and punish smaller firms that don't have legal departments on speed dial. It would've cost the state's AI ecosystem nearly $30 million in compliance overhead. Even California got the memo. Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom vetoedS.B. 1047, which would have imposed strict liability, mandatory "kill switches," and speculative rules targeting general-purpose AI. Newsomwarned against taking a "California-only"approach that wasn't backed by science or national coordination. When California, of all places, warns against overregulating tech, you know the pendulum is swinging. These three states were being sold the same faulty product. A bipartisan coalition "of over 200 state lawmakers from more than 45 states"called the Multistate AI Policymaker Working Group (MAP-WG) has beenspamming statehouses with copypasta legislationdesigned to look thoughtful, but built on the same anti-tech, anti-growth assumptions. These bills aim to regulate hypothetical risks, not real harms, even though there are existing civil rights and consumer protection laws that already address the latter. Colorado was the test case. It passed one of these bills last year and has been cleaning up the mess ever since. Democratic Gov. Jared Polis had to create an AI task force to deal with concerns from startups and mid-sized companies warning of job losses, capital flight, and regulatory confusion. The task forceoffered little more than vague suggestionsand no real fixes. Meanwhile, the federal stance has shifted hard in the other direction. President Donald Trumprepealed Biden's AI executive order in January, replacing it with a framework focused on tearing down barriers to innovation and maintaining U.S. dominance in the field.Vice President J.D. Vance, speaking in Paris, nailed the problem: "Excessive regulation of the AI sector could kill a transformative industry just as it's taking off."Texas has a chance to lead—not just by avoiding Europe's mistakes, but by setting a national standard for how to do AI regulation right: focused, limited, and innovation-first.Other states,like New York, are still stuck fighting yesterday's fears. Texas is poised to build tomorrow's breakthroughs—if lawmakers finish the job in the Senate. The postTexas Could Blow Its Shot at Leading the AI Revolutionappeared first onReason.com.

Texas Could Blow Its Shot at Leading the AI Revolution

Texas Could Blow Its Shot at Leading the AI Revolution Texas is built for growth: It's got land, talent, and a deep-seated cultural bias...
'Need to be honest': Vance questions Biden's health as president after cancer diagnosisNew Foto - 'Need to be honest': Vance questions Biden's health as president after cancer diagnosis

WASHINGTON − Vice PresidentJD Vancequestioned whetherJoe Bidenhad been fit for duty in the White House following news the former president has an aggressive form of prostate cancer. Speaking to reporters on Air Force Two aftermeeting Pope Leo XIV in Rome, Vance said he wishes the best for Biden, adding that "hopefully he makes the right recovery." Vance then reflected on Biden's four years in the White House. "Whether the right time to have this conversation is now or at some point in the future, we really do need to be honest about whether the former president was capable of doing the job," Vance said. "You can separate the desire for him to have the right health outcome with the recognition that whether it was doctors or whether there were staffers around the former president ‒ I don't think he was able to do a good job for the American people." More:Former President Joe Biden diagnosed with 'aggressive form' of prostate cancer "That's not politics. That's not because I disagreed with him on policy," Vance said. "That's because I don't think that he was in good enough health." Biden, 82, was diagnosed on May 16 withprostate cancer that had spread to the boneafter a nodule was discovered on his prostate following urinary symptoms, a spokesperson said. Biden has a Gleason score of 9 and a grade group 5, which is on the higher end of the scale, meaning the cancer is more likely to grow and spread quickly. Biden'smost recent annual physical as presidenttook place in February 2024. The president's physician, Dr. Kevin O'Connor, did not identify any signs of cancer, describing Biden as a "healthy, active, robust 81-year-old male who remains fit to successfully execute the duties of the Presidency." The report cited Biden's sleep apnea treatment and stiffened gait from arthritis. "I blame him less than I blame the people around him," Vance said of Biden. "Why didn't the American people have a better sense of his health picture? Why didn't the American people have more accurate information about what he was actually dealing with?" More:After Joe Biden medical diagnosis report, here are risks and symptoms of prostate cancer In February 2023, askin lesion was removed from Biden's chest, but his doctor said no additional treatment was needed for what is known as basal cell carcinoma, a common form of skin cancer. Biden, the oldest person ever elected as U.S. president, dropped out of the 2024 presidential election last July after he struggled to piece together coherent thoughts during a disastrous debate with PresidentDonald Trumpthat exposed an aging president. More:Joe Biden's cancer diagnosis and when illness strikes just as you finally retire Multiple books published in the months after Biden's presidency have detailed efforts by the White Houseto conceal Biden's decline, forcing Democrats to answer whether they believe the octogenarian president should have passed the torcher earlier. "This is serious stuff. This is a guy who carries around the nuclear football for the world's largest nuclear arsenal," Vance said. "This is not child's play, and we can pray for good health, but also recognize that if you're not in good enough health to do the job, you shouldn't be doing the job." More:Trump still 'trusts' doctors after shocking Biden cancer diagnosis Trump, in a May 18 statement, said he and first ladyMelania Trumpwere saddened to hear about Biden's cancer and extended their "warmest and best wishes" to the Biden family. Trump ‒ who for years has mocked Biden over his mental fitness ‒ has yet to publicly speculate on Biden's health as president following his cancer diagnosis. White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt on May 19 said Trumpstill has faith in the qualityof health care being provided to him in the wake of his predecessor's cancer diagnosis. "He trusts his physicians," Leavitt said. Reach Joey Garrison on X @joeygarrison. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:VP Vance questions Biden's health as president after cancer diagnosis

'Need to be honest': Vance questions Biden's health as president after cancer diagnosis

'Need to be honest': Vance questions Biden's health as president after cancer diagnosis WASHINGTON − Vice PresidentJD Vancequest...
In latest Trump overhaul, Justice Department may change who prosecutes public corruptionNew Foto - In latest Trump overhaul, Justice Department may change who prosecutes public corruption

WASHINGTON –The Justice Departmentis considering moving decisions about whether toprosecute public officialssuch asmembers of Congressto regional U.S. attorney's offices rather than at headquarters, part ofPresident Donald Trump's overhaul of the department and its public corruption enforcement. Public integrity cases, such as theindictment that was dropped against New York Mayor Eric Adamsorconviction of former Sen. Robert Menendez, D-N.J., are among the highest-profile cases the department prosecutes. The department is reviewing the provisions of several sections of itsJustice Manual, which provides written guidanceabout how cases are pursued but no decisions have been made, according to a department official. Trump has been critical of department prosecutions and he hasstopped enforcing some anti-bribery statutes. Trump is also accused by critics oftaking bribesfrom foreign governments, most recently for saying he would accept a$400 million airplane from Qatar, although he contends the gift would be to the Defense Department and not him personally. The review aims to ensure that U.S. attorneys in 94 offices nationwide share equal responsibility with headquarters officials in choosing whether to pursue public corruption cases, according to a department official speaking on background. No final decisions have been made, the department official said. The review wasfirst reported by The Washington Post. Public corruption cases are often politically sensitive.Adams argued politics were behind his prosecutionfor allegedly taking bribes from the Turkish government during the Biden administration, because he had blamed the federal government for an influx of migrants. Adams, a Democrat who is now running for reelection as an independent, dropped previous criticism of Trump andflew to Mar-a-Lagoto meet with him. The Trump administration dropped the charges by arguing the case distracted the mayor from helping federal authorities enforce immigration laws. Prosecutors working on the case, including one of Trump's own appointees,resigned in protest of that decision. John Keller the acting head of the Justice Department's public corruption unit, also resigned in protest and theTrump administration subsequently slashed that unit's staffing. Trump was indicted in two federal cases between his two president terms before won back the office. He has complained for years the department "weaponized" its prosecutions for political reasons. But former President Joe Biden and former Attorney General Merrick Garland denied political motivations were behind Trump indictments for mishandling classified documents and conspiring to overturn the 2020 election. The department dropped both cases after Trump won the 2024 election under longstanding policy not to prosecute a sitting president. A Trump nominee to become U.S. attorneyin Washington, D.C., Ed Martin, threatened to investigate Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., for allegedly threatening Supreme Court justices during a protest. Martin withdrew from considerationfor the post that requires Senate confirmation and Trump named him to a Justice Department post instead. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:DOJ considers changing who decides to pursue public corruption cases

In latest Trump overhaul, Justice Department may change who prosecutes public corruption

In latest Trump overhaul, Justice Department may change who prosecutes public corruption WASHINGTON –The Justice Departmentis considering mo...
Supreme Court allows Trump to revoke protected status for thousands of VenezuelansNew Foto - Supreme Court allows Trump to revoke protected status for thousands of Venezuelans

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Monday gave the Trump administration the green light to revoke special legal protections for thousands of Venezuelan immigrants. The high court granted an emergency application filed by the administration, meaning officials can move forward with reversing a decision made at the tail end of the Biden administration to extend protections for more than 300,000 Venezuelans under the federal Temporary Protected Status program. Thebrief ordernoted that liberal Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson would have denied the application. Litigation will now continue in lower courts. As a result of political instability in Venezuela, the Biden administration in March 2021 said Venezuelans were eligible for temporary protected status under the federal program that has existed since 1990 to provide humanitarian relief to people from countries reeling from war, natural disasters, or other catastrophes. People accepted into the program have legal status in the United States and can get work authorization for up to 18 months, subject to extensions. At issue before the Supreme Court was a subsequent designation made in October 2023 and extended in January just before Trump took office. It is set to expire in October 2026. In February, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem sought to unwind those determinations, meaning the protections would expire this year instead. A judge in the Northern District of California blocked the move, citing concerns that the decision was based in part on racial animus. Solicitor General D. John Sauer wrote in the administration's emergency application that the courts could not review Noem's decision. "The court's order contravenes fundamental executive branch prerogatives and indefinitely delays sensitive policy decisions in an area of immigration police that Congress recognized must be flexible, fast-paced and discretionary," he said. The National TPS Alliance and individual Venezuelans challenged the move in court. Their lawyers wrote that the Trump administration was essentially seeking to evade judicial review on the scope of its own powers. "It should be unremarkable that federal courts say what the law is," they added.

Supreme Court allows Trump to revoke protected status for thousands of Venezuelans

Supreme Court allows Trump to revoke protected status for thousands of Venezuelans WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Monday gave the Trump a...
Explainer-Trump and Putin speak about ending the war in UkraineNew Foto - Explainer-Trump and Putin speak about ending the war in Ukraine

MOSCOW (Reuters) -Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin spoke by telephone on Monday, the third officially announced call this year between the presidents of the United States and Russia. How often do they speak, how do they speak and what are their positions on the war? HOW OFTEN HAVE THEY SPOKEN? After Trump's inauguration in January, the first publicly announced telephone call between Trump and Putin was on Feb. 12. Trump said then that both Putin and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy had expressed a desire for peace in separate phone calls, and Trump ordered top U.S. officials to begin talks on ending the war in Ukraine. They spoke again on March 18. The Kremlin said they spoke for about 2 hours, one of the longest Putin calls. Putin agreed to stop attacking Ukrainian energy facilities temporarily but declined to endorse a full 30-day ceasefire that Trump hoped would be the first step toward a permanent peace deal. Ukraine and Russia accused each other of breaking that moratorium on attacking energy facilities. DO THEY SPEAK MORE OFTEN THAN IS ANNOUNCED? The Kremlin said in March that there may have been more contacts between Trump and Putin than the publicly announced telephone calls over recent months. Before the contacts with Trump, Putin last spoke to a sitting U.S. president in February 2022, when he and Joe Biden spoke shortly before the Russian leader ordered tens of thousands of troops into Ukraine. Washington Post journalist Bob Woodward in his 2024 book "War" reported that Trump had direct conversations as many as seven times with Putin after he left the White House in 2021. Asked if that were true in an interview with Bloomberg last year, Trump said: "If I did, it's a smart thing." The Kremlin denied Woodward's report. Reuters, The Washington Post and Axios reported separately that Trump and Putin spoke in early November. The Kremlin also denied those reports. HOW DO THEY SPEAK? They speak over encrypted lines. Translators participate. Putin speaks some English but speaks Russian to negotiate. So far, they have not used video conferencing. WHAT IS TRUMP'S POSITION? Trump, who says he wants to be remembered as a peacemaker, has repeatedly called for an end to the "bloodbath" of Ukraine, which his administration casts as a proxy war between the United States and Russia. Trump has repeatedly said that Putin is open to peace and that Ukraine simply does not "have the cards" to fight a war against Russia. Trump has ruled out NATO membership for Ukraine and suggested that past U.S. support for enlarging the U.S.-led military alliance was a cause of the war. In late March, Trump said he was "pissed off" with Putin and will impose secondary tariffs of 25% to 50% on buyers of Russian oil if he feels Moscow is blocking his efforts to end the war in Ukraine. European leaders say Putin is not serious about peace, though they fear Trump and he may force a punitive peace deal that will leave Ukraine essentially shorn of a fifth of its territory and lacking a strong security guarantee against possible future attack from Russia. Former U.S. President Joe Biden, Western European leaders and Ukraine cast the invasion as an imperial-style land grab and repeatedly vowed to defeat Russian forces which they say could one day attack NATO, a claim denied by Moscow. WHAT IS PUTIN'S POSITION? Putin sent thousands of troops into Ukraine in February 2022. The conflict in eastern Ukraine began in 2014 after a pro-Russian president was toppled in Ukraine's Maidan Revolution and Russia annexed Crimea, with Russian-backed separatist forces fighting Ukraine's armed forces. Putin, whose forces control just under one fifth of Ukraine and are advancing, says he is willing to discuss peace but is wary of a ceasefire and says fighting cannot be paused until a number of crucial conditions are worked out or clarified. In June 2024, Putin said Ukraine must officially drop its NATO ambitions and withdraw its troops from the entire territory of the four Ukrainian regions Russia claims. When Putin proposed direct talks with Ukraine earlier this month, Putin specifically mentioned a 2022 draft deal which Russia and Ukraine negotiated shortly after the Russian invasion started. Under a draft peace plan crafted by the Trump administration, the U.S. would de jure recognise Russian control of Crimea, and de facto recognise Russian control of Luhansk and parts of Zaporizhzhia, Donetsk and Kherson. (Reporting by Guy Faulconbridge, Editing by William Maclean)

Explainer-Trump and Putin speak about ending the war in Ukraine

Explainer-Trump and Putin speak about ending the war in Ukraine MOSCOW (Reuters) -Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin spoke by telephone on Mond...

 

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