teleo-codex/domains/ai-alignment/house-senate-ai-defense-divergence-creates-structural-governance-chokepoint-at-conference.md
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extract: 2026-03-29-congress-diverging-paths-ai-fy2026-ndaa-defense-bills
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2026-03-29 02:52:47 +00:00

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claim ai-alignment The FY2026 NDAA shows Senate chambers favor process-based AI oversight while House chambers favor capability expansion, and conference reconciliation structurally favors the capability-expansion position experimental Biometric Update / K&L Gates analysis of FY2026 NDAA House and Senate versions 2026-03-29
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biometric-update-/-k&l-gates Biometric Update / K&L Gates analysis of FY2026 NDAA House and Senate versions

House-Senate divergence on AI defense governance creates a structural chokepoint at conference reconciliation where capability-expansion provisions systematically defeat oversight constraints

The FY2026 NDAA House and Senate versions reveal a systematic divergence in AI governance approach. The Senate version emphasizes oversight mechanisms: whole-of-government AI strategy, cross-functional oversight teams, AI security frameworks, and cyber-innovation sandboxes. The House version emphasizes capability development: directed surveys of AI capabilities for military targeting, focus on minimizing collateral damage through AI, and critically, a bar on spectrum allocation modifications 'essential for autonomous weapons and surveillance tools' — which implicitly endorses autonomous weapons deployment by locking in the electromagnetic infrastructure they require.

This divergence is not a one-time event but a structural pattern that will repeat in FY2027 NDAA markups. The conference reconciliation process — where House and Senate versions are merged — becomes the governance chokepoint. The House's capability-expansion framing creates a structural obstacle: any Senate oversight provision that could constrain capability development faces a chamber that has already legislatively endorsed the infrastructure for autonomous weapons.

For the AI Guardrails Act targeting FY2027 NDAA, this means Slotkin's autonomous weapons restrictions would enter through Senate Armed Services Committee (where she sits) but must survive conference against a House that has already taken the opposite position. The pattern from FY2026 suggests capability provisions survive conference more readily than oversight constraints.


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