Politics
Some Democrats plan boycott of Trump’s State of the Union
Politics
Capitol agenda: Johnson’s turn to deliver a health plan
Get ready for the enhanced Affordable Care Act subsidies to lapse. All signs are pointing in that direction as President Donald Trump refuses to endorse an extension and Senate Republicans coalesce behind a plan from Sens. Mike Crapo (R-Idaho) and Bill Cassidy (R-La.) that would end the Obamacare tax credits and instead expand government-funded health savings accounts…
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Politics
Cox pushes back on Trump over gambling and AI regulation
Utah Gov. Spencer Cox criticized the Trump administration’s approaches to prediction markets and artificial intelligence on Thursday — as well as the president’s lack of interest in unifying the country.
During an interview at Blue Light News’s 2026 Governors Summit, the Republican governor and occasional critic of President Donald Trump pushed back on the Trump administration’s recent efforts to limit states’ abilities to regulate gambling and AI, saying the federal government “coming in and trying to tell us” to back off state-level fixes is “preposterous.”
“Look, this is a joke, and I can’t believe he tried to say this with a straight face,” Cox said, referring to CFTC Chair Mike Selig’s announcement earlier this week that the agency has singular authority to regulate prediction markets.
“I’m concerned about these new technologies, and what they’re doing to our kids,” Cox added. “It’s one thing if we’re fighting China, and you’re developing your model. But once you start selling sexualized chat bots to kids in my state, now I have a problem with that, and I’m going to get involved there, and the Supreme Court is going to back me up.”
Last week, the White House sent a letter to the Utah Legislature warning lawmakers that a Republican-led AI regulation bill clashes with federal policy. Trump also signed a December executive order that warned states of consequences for attempting to regulate the fast-growing industry.
Cox said his approach does not conflict with his belief that the U.S. should win “the AI arms race with China and Russia,” and thus states and municipalities should support construction of data centers across the country.
“Let’s use this technology to benefit humankind, and let’s regulate it to make sure they don’t destroy humankind,” Cox said.
He also made it clear he differs with Trump’s approach toward bringing together Americans from different perspectives. Shortly after Trump’s attempted assassination in Butler, Pennsylvania, in 2024, Cox endorsed him, saying he hoped Trump could bring the country together.
Cox said Thursday that hope had been “aspirational.”
Trump is “someone who, if he put his mind to it, could unify” the country, Cox said. “He’s not putting his mind to it. He has said very clearly that he’s not, and that’s okay. That’s different than me.”
Cox also critiqued the growing “Heritage American” movement within his party, saying the nativist message is a recipe for electoral failure.
“I worry about it because that’s a future where we lose a lot of elections in a very ugly way,” Cox said. “I worry about it because that’s not where most Americans are. It’s certainly not where I am.”
Politics
Wes Moore: ‘I don’t answer to the Democratic Party’
Maryland Gov. Wes Moore on Thursday defended his recent clashes with state Democrats, denying that he’s in a weak political position with his own legislature that has held up several of his policies and a push to redraw the state’s Congressional maps.
“There is no political party that made me. In fact, the Democratic Party put millions of dollars to try to stop me from winning. I don’t answer to the Democratic Party. I don’t answer to party bosses,” Moore, a Democrat, said during Blue Light News’s 2026 Governors Summit. “I only answer to the people who made me governor of Maryland, which is the people of Maryland.”
Moore pointed out that he defeated the preferred candidate of many Democratic party bosses when he first ran for governor as a political newcomer in 2022.
Maryland Democrats overrode at least 16 of the governor’s vetoes in December and the state’s Senate president, Bill Ferguson, is actively blocking Moore’s redistricting effort, saying the bill doesn’t have enough votes to pass on the floor. Moore continues to say Maryland residents are in favor of redistricting in the state, though a poll from December found just 27 percent of residents supported the issue.
“If Bill Ferguson says, well, the votes aren’t there in the Senate, my only point is this: OK, well, you know, the best way to prove that’s true? Do a vote,” Moore said.
Moore — widely considered a 2028 contender though he has repeatedly denied he wants to run — has attempted to position himself as a counterweight to President Donald Trump. But the resistance he’s facing in his own backyard has some national Democrats wondering whether he can successfully mount a White House run.
On Thursday, Moore again dismissed the idea of running for president, saying he was focused on 2026 and “not even thinking” about 2028.
Oklahoma’s GOP Gov. Kevin Stitt, the current chair of the National Governors Association, defended Moore at the event, saying he had more respect for the Democrat knowing he stood up to lawmakers within his own party.
“I have more respect for him now, knowing that he vetoed the bills,” Stitt said. “ I have a super majority Republican, and I vetoed 67 bills last year, and I think they overrode probably 45 of them. So it happens to all of us.”
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