Last minute deal wins bipartisan passage of AI bill in CT Senate

Last minute deal wins bipartisan passage of AI bill in CT Senate


A late-night deal narrowing the scope of a controversial artificial intelligence regulatory bill produced bipartisan passage in the Senate on Wednesday but left unanswered a bigger question: Are the changes enough for Gov. Ned Lamont?

Sen. James Maroney, D-Milford, who has become the General Assembly’s acknowledged expert on data privacy and AI, declined to speculate if the changes were sufficient to avoid a veto of Senate Bill 2.

“It would be my hope,” said Maroney, co-chair of the General Law Committee, where the bill originated.

Until Wednesday night, the dynamics this year were little changed from 2024, when the Senate Democratic majority passed a similar bill on a party-line vote, only to see it die from inaction in the House at the urging of the governor.

Republicans and the Democratic governor had feared last year’s bill was a premature effort to set standards for the development and use of artificial intelligence and that it could hamper innovation and investment.

Sen. Paul Cicarella of North Haven, the ranking Senate Republican on General Law, said the revised measure maintains significant consumer protections while limiting the exposure of developers and users to litigation.

“We want businesses to come to Connecticut, know that they’re welcome, know we’re going to be good to them and not put burdens on them, whether that comes in the form of regulations or comes in the form of fees,” Cicarella said.

With the revisions drafted by Maroney and co-sponsored by four Republican senators, SB 2 passed on a 32-4 vote shortly before midnight, with all 25 Democrats and seven of the 11 Republicans in support.



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