At least six lawmakers discreetly removed their AI bills from the table this spring somewhere in the hallways of the Louisiana State Capitol in Baton Rouge. No press conference, no floor drama. Proposals that had taken months to draft simply vanished from the docket after a slow retreat that included phone calls here and meetings with the governor’s office there. People in state capitals from Sacramento to Albany are paying close attention to this kind of political retreat, which seldom makes the front page.
The figures provide a clear enough narrative. More than 20 bills, ranging from chatbots that target children to health insurance algorithms, have been filed by Louisiana lawmakers in an effort to give artificial intelligence some structure. At least seven of those bills had been paid by the beginning of April. Legislators gave different explanations, but they all had one thing in common: President Trump had issued an executive order threatening to withhold federal broadband funding from any state that passed AI regulations that went against his administration’s priorities.
| Category | Details |
|---|---|
| State | Louisiana, USA — Regular Legislative Session began March 9, 2026 |
| Senate President | Cameron Henry (R-Metairie) |
| Governor | Jeff Landry (R) — previously vetoed AI election bills in July 2024 |
| Total AI Bills Filed | More than 20 bills introduced; at least 7 scrapped by early April 2026 |
| Federal Threat | Trump executive order (December 2025) threatening to withhold broadband funding from states regulating AI contrary to federal policy |
| Key Bills Scrapped | AI use in health insurance decisions, AI in medical treatment, chatbot limits for children, employment AI disclosure, identity recreation prohibition |
| Bills Still Advancing | AI disclosure in phone calls, political ad AI labeling, mental health chatbot restrictions, patient consent for AI transcription |
| Conservative Opposition | Pelican Institute (conservative think tank) publicly opposed broad AI regulation, citing global competitiveness concerns |
| Notable Legislator Quote | “Rural Louisiana needs that broadband money. I’m not going to jeopardize that.” — Rep. Vincent Cox (R-Gretna) |
| Broader Context | 17 states have AI election laws on the books; Trump’s Big Beautiful Bill initially included a 10-year ban on state AI regulation — rejected by the U.S. Senate |
That threat wasn’t hypothetical for a state where rural communities are still waiting for dependable internet access. It happened right away. “That broadband money is needed in rural Louisiana. Rep. Vincent Cox of Gretna explained why Landry’s office had requested that he put two of his proposals on hold, saying, “I’m not going to jeopardize that.” It’s a line worth pondering for a while. A sitting legislator, chosen to represent his constituents, characterizes a decision as a financial calculation rather than a choice of policy. The simplicity of that reasoning and the ease with which it applies to all other states dealing with the same arithmetic are unsettling.
The timing of Louisiana’s situation is especially instructive. It wasn’t until February, long after Trump’s executive order in December, that state legislators began submitting bills. According to one representative, the complaints didn’t begin until after the bills had been drafted. The time difference between the warning’s issuance and its actual landing raises the possibility that either the message wasn’t conveyed sufficiently early on or that lawmakers thought they had more leeway than they actually did. Which is still unknown. Cameron Henry, the president of the Senate, stated that after speaking with the White House over the phone twice, he was still unsure of what precisely would cross a line. The second most powerful member of the state legislature has made a significant admission.

The Pelican Institute, a conservative think tank with close ties to Governor Landry, has consistently opposed broad AI regulation, claiming that bills like House Bill 734, which would have established a consumer bill of rights for AI, run the risk of making the technology unaffordable for smaller businesses and stifling innovation to the point of exclusion. Actually, it’s a legitimate worry that many thoughtful people have. However, opposing bad legislation on its merits is not the same as withdrawing bills because your infrastructure funding was threatened by a president. In this debate, it has become somewhat of a habit to confuse those two very different types of arguments.
Not every lawmaker in Louisiana gave up. As of early April, a bipartisan group of five was still working on at least six bills, such as one that forbade AI-generated content in paid political advertising and another that required disclosure when AI was used during phone calls. These more focused proposals, which focus on particular, observable harms rather than broad attempts to define what AI is permitted to do, appear to have the best chance of surviving. The difference is important. In 2026, responsible state-level AI governance might actually look like this: defensive, incremental, and constantly anticipating Washington’s next move.
As this develops, it seems that Louisiana has unintentionally become a test case for how much power the federal government has over states that attempt to regulate AI, rather than how to do so. Other capitals are coming to their own conclusions. It’s likely that some will surrender more quickly than Louisiana did. Some may determine that the battle is worthwhile. It’s more difficult to determine whether any of it will result in the kind of oversight that regular people are silently waiting for someone to provide, such as those whose children converse with a chatbot at midnight or whose health insurance claims are rejected by an algorithm.
