Photo Credit: Sarah Grillo/Axios

California has always moved ahead of Washington on technology regulation, and artificial intelligence (AI) is the next thing for the state to tackle. 

With the U.S. Congress unable to pass federal AI legislation, the state has spent the past two years building one of the most comprehensive AI regulatory frameworks in the country, piece by piece, bill by bill, from the statehouse in Sacramento.

California Governor Gavin Newsom signed an Executive Order on March 30, 2026, tightening the rules for AI companies that want to do business with the state. The order, which Newsom’s office is calling “first-of-its-kind,” sets new procurement standards requiring AI vendors to demonstrate that their systems have safeguards in place to protect user privacy, prevent harmful bias, and block illegal content including child sexual abuse material.

The order arrives at a moment when the federal government and states are openly diverging on how to handle AI regulation in the country.

What the Order Actually Does

At its core, the executive order directs the California Department of General Services (DGS) and the California Department of Technology (CDT) to overhaul how the state evaluates and awards contracts to AI companies. The departments have 120 days to submit their recommendations.

Under the order, companies seeking state contracts must demonstrate responsible policies around three key areas – the exploitation or distribution of illegal content, models that display bias or lack tools to prevent such bias, and violations of civil rights and free speech.

The order also gives CDT’s chief information security officer the authority to independently evaluate federal designations that label AI companies as supply chain risks. If the state disagrees with those designations, DGS and CDT can jointly issue guidance allowing state agencies to continue procuring from those companies. 

That provision effectively gives California the ability to bypass federal procurement decisions it considers politically motivated.

And on the content side, the order requires state agencies to watermark AI-generated videos and images to limit the spread of misinformation and help the public distinguish between content made with real people and content generated by AI. California is the first state in the country to issue this kind of directive at the government level.

The Federal Backdrop

The timing of the order is tied to moves by the Trump administration. The news follows President Trump’s warnings to states not to regulate AI independently, as the administration has pushed for a single nationwide approach, a move driven largely by lobbying from major tech companies. The Trump administration has even gone as far as signing an Executive Order that pushes artificial intelligence (AI) oversight firmly into federal hands and blocks states from enforcing their own rules on the technology

However, Newsom has been direct about framing this as a state-versus-federal contrast. “While others in Washington are designing policy and creating contracts in the shadow of misuse, we’re focused on doing this the right way,” he said in a statement after signing the order.

Expanding AI Inside Government

Beyond vendor regulation, the order also pushes California to expand its own use of generative AI in state services. The order commits to deploying a new AI-powered tool that helps Californians navigate government programs and benefits based on life events such as starting a business, finding a job, or applying for disaster relief.

Additionally, the order requires departments and agencies to monitor AI systems for errors and biases over time, even after they’ve been approved for state use.

California’s Leverage

California’s ability to set standards that the rest of the country ends up following is not new, and its footprint in the AI industry gives it real weight here. The state is home to 33 of the top 50 privately held AI companies in the world and accounts for 25% of all AI patents, conference papers, and companies globally. In 2024, 15.7% of all U.S. AI job postings were in California, which was the highest share of any state, ahead of Texas at 8.8% and New York at 5.8%.

That concentration means the standards California imposes on AI companies will, in practice, shape how they operate anywhere else. When a company wants to stay on California’s approved vendor list, it has to build its compliance around California’s rules and not just within state lines.

Whether other states follow Sacramento’s lead or wait to see whether federal pressure slows this down is the question that remains unanswered.

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I’m Precious Amusat, Phronews’ Content Writer. I conduct in-depth research and write on the latest developments in the tech industry, including trends in big tech, startups, cybersecurity, artificial intelligence and their global impacts. When I’m off the clock, you’ll find me cheering on women’s footy, curled up with a romance novel, or binge-watching crime thrillers.

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