Federal News
Congress Addresses AI Policy Lag
March 11, 2026
Congressional leaders, including Representative Don Beyer, have publicly acknowledged that the U.S. Congress is behind in developing comprehensive AI policy, particularly regarding privacy and regulatory frameworks. Beyer emphasized the urgent need for bipartisan cooperation to establish a national AI governance structure but expressed skepticism about near-term consensus. In the interim, he suggested that states may pursue experimental approaches to AI regulation until federal agreement is reached.
- Why this matters: Procurement professionals should anticipate evolving AI regulatory requirements that could impact federal contracting, especially in technology acquisition and compliance.
- The lack of a unified federal AI policy indicates potential variability in procurement standards and contract terms across agencies and states.
- Contractors specializing in AI technologies should prepare for increased scrutiny on privacy and ethical considerations in upcoming solicitations.
- Organizations may benefit from engaging with state-level AI initiatives as pilot environments influencing future federal procurement policies.
Congress has been slow to address the privacy and regulatory challenges posed by artificial intelligence (AI) and voiced doubts that lawmakers can come together on a bipartisan framework for the rapidly advancing technology.
— Don Beyer, Representative, D-Va.
Agencies
United States Congress, Office of the President of the United States
Locations
Sources
- Beyer Says Lawmakers Are Behind on AI Policy, Calls for Bipartisan Action · meritalk · Mar 11
- Beyer Says Lawmakers Are Behind on AI Policy, Calls for Bipartisan Action · meritalk · Mar 11
- Beyer Says Lawmakers Are Behind on AI Policy, Calls for Bipartisan Action โ MeriTalk · MeriTalk · Mar 11