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  "portable_summary_markdown": "# Federal Preemption of State AI Laws: 181 Bills and No Record Governance Among Them\n\nRecord: CP-SIG-5\nProfile: Counterpose Publication\nStatus: active\nLifecycle: published\nAnchor posture: Anchors not applicable\n\n## Sections\n\n### Signal body\n\n# Federal Preemption of State AI Laws: 181 Bills and No Record Governance Among Them Counterpose | CP-5 | February 19, 2026 A publication of Vega Commons Project, Inc. --- A December 2025 executive order established a DOJ AI Litigation Task Force to challenge state AI laws and directed Commerce to identify state regulations requiring challenge within 90 days. The White House conditioned broadband funding on states not enacting conflicting AI laws and sent memos opposing specific state bills, including a Utah bill requiring frontier AI developers to publish safety plans. As of February 19, 2026, the 90-day identification deadline was approaching. A custody surface is the set of records an AI system generates during operation that can be discovered, subpoenaed, or compelled through legal process. An interaction record is the log of what a user asked, what the system responded, and any reasoning the system performed. At the same time, 181 AI and privacy bills were tracked across state legislatures. Chatbot bills advanced in Virginia, Washington, Utah, Arizona, and Hawaii. Tennessee passed a health AI bill. None of these bills addresses the lifecycle of AI interaction records. They regulate transparency (tell users it is AI), safety (detect self-harm), or discrimination (prevent bias). The record governance layer sits beneath all of these concerns and is addressed by neither the state bills the federal government seeks to preempt nor the federal framework it proposes as a replacement. Both sides of the preemption fight absorb political energy without either addressing the custody question. State bills regulate platform conduct toward users. Federal preemption removes those regulations. Neither layer governs what happens to the records generated during every AI interaction: who retains them, for how long, under what lifecycle controls, and what happens when they are demanded in legal proceedings. A governance standard that addresses platform behavior at the record layer operates regardless of which regulatory level prevails, because it addresses infrastructure architecture rather than governmental authority. The preemption debate determines which government can regulate AI. It does not determine whether the records AI generates are governed. --- ## Sources | Source | Date | Description | URL |\n|--------|------|-------------|-----|\n| White House, Executive Order on AI preemption | December 11, 2025 | DOJ task force, Commerce identification mandate |  |\n| Roll Call | February 19, 2026 | 181 state AI bills tracked, preemption memo details |  | --- ## Amendment Log *No amendments to date.* --- The observations presented reflect analytical assessment of publicly available information and do not constitute legal, insurance, or investment advice. Counterpose maintains no formal relationship with any vendor, regulator, or standards body referenced in this publication.",
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  "title": "Federal Preemption of State AI Laws: 181 Bills and No Record Governance Among Them",
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