Trump postpones AI executive order signing over objections to directive

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President Trump canceled the signing ceremony for a new AI cybersecurity executive order on May 21, just hours before it was scheduled to take place. His reason: parts of the draft could weaken America’s position in the global AI race.

The order would have directed federal agencies to build a pre-release evaluation process for advanced AI models, essentially giving the government a first look at systems from major developers before they hit the public.

What the order would have done

The draft executive order centered on AI cybersecurity and safety oversight. Its marquee provision: a voluntary review process where federal agencies would evaluate cutting-edge AI models from companies like Google, Microsoft, and Elon Musk’s xAI before those models were released to the public.

Agencies would have had two months to stand up that evaluation pipeline.

Earlier this month, Google, Microsoft, and xAI had all confirmed their willingness to provide early access to their AI models for government review.

A pattern of push and pull on AI regulation

This isn’t the first time the administration has tried to thread the needle between AI safety and AI speed. Trump signed previous executive actions on AI on January 23, 2025, and December 11, 2025, both emphasizing deregulation and the removal of barriers to US AI leadership.

Lawmakers had also begun raising concerns about the draft’s potential for federal overreach.

Trump’s decision to pull the order rather than sign a version he found problematic is notable in itself. Presidents don’t typically cancel signing ceremonies at the last minute.

Why this matters for tech investors

For companies like Google, Microsoft, and xAI, the near-term impact is likely neutral to positive. They’d already agreed to voluntary early access, suggesting they weren’t worried about what evaluators would find.

One thing worth noting for crypto and digital asset investors: this executive order had no direct connection to cryptocurrency regulation or digital finance policy. The AI governance conversation and the crypto governance conversation remain on separate tracks within the administration.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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