Explore how President Trump's tech agenda impacts AI regulation, cryptocurrency policy, and big tech antitrust enforcement as his second term unfolds.
President Trump has moved swiftly to reinstate and expand his 2020 executive order on artificial intelligence, prioritizing innovation over federal oversight. The order instructs agencies to reduce regulatory burdens on AI development, a sharp reversal from the Biden administration's AI Bill of Rights framework. This hands-off approach could accelerate deployment of AI systems across industries, but critics warn it may sideline safety and equity standards.
“We want American AI to lead the world. That means getting government out of the way,” Trump said at a March 2025 rally, signaling his administration's intent to rely on voluntary industry guidelines rather than binding rules.
The new directive, signed in January 2026, specifically targets federal agencies to review and rescind any AI-related regulations that “unnecessarily burden innovation.” It also establishes a White House AI Council composed of industry executives, a structure that mirrors Trump's earlier approach to deregulation in energy and telecommunications. The result is a regulatory environment that gives companies wide latitude to train and deploy models without mandatory audits or transparency requirements.
While this approach may boost U.S. competitiveness against China, it shifts the burden of safety to private companies, raising questions about accountability. Investors in AI startups have cheered the clarity, but consumer advocacy groups have already filed several lawsuits challenging the rollback of protections.
Trump's once-skeptical stance on cryptocurrency has transformed into a full embrace. In early 2026, he appointed a crypto-friendly SEC chair and signed an executive order directing the Treasury to create a national digital asset framework. The shift is poised to unlock a wave of institutional investment while reducing enforcement actions against exchanges and DeFi protocols.
The new SEC leadership has already dropped several pending investigations into major crypto firms, and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) has been granted primary oversight of digital commodities—a move industry lobbyists sought for years. The administration also proposed tax incentives for companies that hold Bitcoin as a reserve asset, a policy that aligns with Trump's campaign promises to make the U.S. “the crypto capital of the planet.”
This pro-crypto stance contrasts sharply with the previous administration's aggressive enforcement, which included high-profile cases against Binance and Coinbase. For startups and investors, the new regime offers a predictable runway—but consumer protections, particularly around stablecoins and fraud, remain thin. Blockchain applications in real estate are already benefiting from the lighter touch, with tokenized property deals rising 60% in Q1 2026.
Trump's relationship with Big Tech has always been conflicted. While his Department of Justice filed the landmark antitrust case against Google in 2020, his administration also railed against alleged political bias by social media platforms. Now back in office, Trump is signaling a major pivot. The antitrust agenda appears to be shifting from structural breakups to behavioral remedies focused on free speech and content moderation.
The DOJ has reportedly sought to settle the Google search monopoly case with a consent decree requiring the company to offer competitors default search placement in some contexts, rather than forcing a divestiture of Chrome or Android. Similarly, the FTC under new leadership has scaled back investigations into Amazon's marketplace practices and Meta's privacy violations, arguing that prior cases were “politically motivated.”
“We cannot break up American champions while Chinese companies are eating our lunch,” Trump told reporters in April 2026, emphasizing a new “America first” competition policy that prioritizes domestic strength over internal rivalries.
This approach has emboldened tech giants to accelerate bold moves: Meta relaunched its facial recognition program, Google deepened its AI integration across all products, and Apple announced plans to enter the streaming search market. Critics argue that the administration is trading antitrust enforcement for perceived political loyalty, creating a two-tier system where favored companies operate with impunity.
For investors, the shift signals reduced breakup risk and greater certainty for Big Tech's AI ambitions. But the patchwork of state actions could lead to conflicting regulations, especially around data privacy. Companies are already lobbying for a federal preemption law, though Congress remains divided.