
What We Do
LegisLogiq delivers tailored solutions that bridge the gap between innovation and regulation. Our team provides clients with high-impact advocacy, targeted policy messaging, and hands-on guidance to navigate complex federal and state regulatory environments.
Who We Are
We believe the best regulatory outcomes strike a balance between principled self-regulation and targeted, risk-based oversight. When done right, policy can protect consumers and foster trust without stifling innovation. We advocate for frameworks that are adaptive and recognize technological nuance, reward accountability, and support continued progress.
Recent Updates
In a major policy move signaling the Administration’s priorities on A.I., President Trump has signed three executive orders (EO) aimed at accelerating U.S. innovation, streamlining infrastructure, and enforcing fairness in federal A.I. tools.
Today the White House’s Office of Science and Technology Policy released its comprehensive national A.I. Action Plan. This twenty-plus page plan emphasizes that U.S. leadership in A.I.; powered by innovation, national security, and energy and infrastructure investment remains a defining objective for the United States.
On July 10, 2025, the European Commission (EU) published its much-anticipated General-Purpose A.I. Code of Practice, offering companies a voluntary roadmap to align with the EU’s new Artificial Intelligence Act before enforcement begins on August 2, 2025. Read about the policy implications for the U.S.
Lawmakers and regulatory agencies, from the White House and Capitol Hill to the FTC and the FCC are scrambling to establish frameworks that can both harness A.I.’s extraordinary potential and address its profound risks.
A.I. investment is skyrocketing across industries, with corporations racing to adopt new tools and platforms. But behind the rapid growth, consumers and workers are feeling the brunt of the impact.
Latest A.I. News
Technology firms continue to push for federal artificial intelligence regulations, after Congress last week stripped the Trump administration’s budget bill of a proposed 10-year moratorium on state-level AI laws.
The moratorium is backed by the Trump administration, and will give big Tech free rein to push ahead with the rollout of AI without being stymied by state or local regulations.
A Republican effort to prevent states from enforcing their own AI regulations cleared a key procedural hurdle on Saturday.
The rule, as reportedly rewritten by Senate Commerce Chair Ted Cruz in an attempt to comply with budgetary rules, would withhold federal broadband funding from states if they try to enforce AI regulations in the next 10 years.
Donald Trump‘s signature piece of legislation, the One Beautiful Bill Act, will be able to retain a provision that prohibits states from regulating artificial intelligence over the next 10 years.
Under the current language in the bill, states would lose out on federal broadband funding if they enforce such laws.
The Senate parliamentarian concluded the controversial push to ban state regulation of artificial intelligence for the next 10 years can remain in President Trump’s sweeping tax and spending bill.