AI regulation activity accelerated sharply in the final week of April 2026. Florida’s Senate passed an AI Bill of Rights, Connecticut passed comprehensive AI legislation, California advanced multiple AI bills through committee, and EU institutions signaled potential delays to key compliance deadlines. Here is the complete regulatory picture as of April 29, 2026.
Florida Senate Passes AI Bill of Rights
Florida’s Senate passed an AI Bill of Rights on April 28, 2026, during a four-day special session. The bill covers consumer rights in AI interactions, requirements for AI system transparency, and restrictions on automated decision-making in employment and housing contexts. The legislation is identical to a bill the Senate passed in March, though it had not previously been taken up by the House. With both chambers now aligned, Florida becomes one of the most significant U.S. states to advance comprehensive AI consumer protection legislation.
Connecticut AI Act Passes Senate
Connecticut Senator James Maroney’s AI bill passed the Senate this week, covering companion chatbots, AI in employment decisions, content provenance, and the regulation of frontier model developers. Connecticut’s bill is notable for its explicit focus on frontier model developers — not just AI applications — placing obligations on companies like OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google at the model development level. This is a relatively new regulatory approach that, if adopted broadly, would significantly increase compliance burdens for AI labs.
California Advances Multiple AI Bills Through Committee
California lawmakers passed numerous AI bills out of committees this week, including four chatbot regulation bills, three healthcare AI bills, two employment AI bills, and a content provenance bill. California’s AB 2713 (California AI Transparency Act: system provenance data) was voted out of the Assembly Privacy and Consumer Protection Committee and is now on a third floor reading. California’s legislative pace on AI is accelerating, with over 30 AI-related bills in active committee consideration as of late April 2026.
EU AI Act: Compliance Deadlines May Shift to 2027–2028
In a significant development for multinational enterprises, EU institutions are actively considering pushing key AI Act compliance deadlines from August 2026 to 2027–2028, reflecting implementation challenges and concerns about regulatory burden on European businesses. The general-purpose AI model provisions, which affect frontier model providers, are the most contested. However, enterprises should not treat potential delays as an invitation to pause compliance work — the direction of travel is clear, and early compliance programs provide competitive differentiation in regulated sectors.
White House National AI Policy Framework: What It Means
The White House’s National Policy Framework for Artificial Intelligence, published in April 2026, emphasizes voluntary commitments by AI developers, sector-specific federal agency guidance, and deference to state-level legislation where federal frameworks are absent. The framework explicitly rejects a comprehensive federal AI Act on the EU model, instead relying on existing regulatory agencies (FTC, FDA, SEC, CFPB) to enforce AI-related requirements within their existing jurisdictions. For enterprises, this means navigating a patchwork of state laws rather than a single federal standard — at least through 2026.
What Enterprises Must Do Before August 2026
Three immediate priorities for enterprises operating AI systems in regulated sectors: First, map all AI use cases against EU AI Act risk classifications before the August 2026 enforcement date — even if deadline extensions are granted, compliance documentation takes months. Second, review employment AI practices against Connecticut and Florida’s new requirements, which apply to systems operating in those states regardless of company headquarters. Third, implement provenance and transparency mechanisms for AI-generated content, as California’s AB 2713 and similar bills in 12 other states are moving toward enactment.