US Vice President JD Vance just took the stage at an AI summit in Paris and turned more than a few heads with a massively pro-acceleration AI speech.
In just 15 minutes, Vance doubled down on a bold “less regulation, more opportunity” message—one that puts him, and the Trump administration, on a collision course with Europe’s strict AI laws.
To understand why this is such a big deal, and what it means for global AI developments, I spoke to Marketing AI Institute founder and CEO Paul Roetzer on Episode 136 of The Artificial Intelligence Show.
This was Vance’s first major policy event since taking office, and he didn’t mince words about how he sees the future of AI. At a conference where “AI safety” was supposed to be front and center, the vice president openly declared he wasn’t there to talk about risks. He was there to talk about "AI opportunity." (At one point, Vance event stated: "The AI future will not be won by hand-wringing about safety. It will be won by building."
That stance alone would have turned heads, but the speech also came at a pivotal moment for global AI regulation. The European Union is cracking down on advanced technology through its AI Act, while over 60 countries (including China) just endorsed an international pledge to make AI safe, ethical, and transparent. The US, under the Trump administration, declined to sign the pledge.
Instead, Vance proclaimed a hands-off approach—and the world took notice.
If you’re not familiar with Vance’s background, it’s worth noting he’s a former venture capitalist who arrived on the political scene thanks in part to big-name Silicon Valley supporters like Peter Thiel.
Thiel famously co-founded PayPal with Elon Musk and was an early Facebook investor. He’s also known for pushing a vision of unfettered tech innovation, minimal regulation, and open-source proliferation.
That puts Vance right at home in an administration that wants to accelerate at all costs when it comes to AI—and that ties in perfectly with the message he delivered in Paris:
“To restrict [AI's] development now,” Vance said, “will not only unfairly benefit incumbents in the space, but it would also mean paralyzing one of the most promising technologies we’ve seen in generations.”
From the podium, Vance painted a picture of AI as the next industrial revolution, an economic turning point on par with the steam engine.
His language was direct: Europe’s AI regulations, in his view, represent “excessive regulation” that stifles progress. The administration made its position crystal clear by refusing to sign the international pledge that promotes safe, secure, and trustworthy AI—a pledge China did sign.
Vance’s move highlights a deepening rift:
In short, the US is betting on unleashing AI without letting the government tighten the screws. The administration is confident that will result in market dominance, faster growth, and, if you ask them, a stronger workforce.
Vance outlined four pillars that frame the administration’s approach:
The sticking point? Many in the industry argue AI’s impact on jobs could be enormous—and not always in a good way.
Roetzer points out that, while policymakers repeatedly promise more jobs, no one seems to have a plan for how this will come to pass.
"I'm struggling tremendously with our government leaders," says Roetzer. "Proclaiming that this is all just going to be fine and it's all just going to make more jobs and there's no actual plan or vision for how that's going to happen."
His worry is that, at this pace, automation might outstrip job creation if there aren’t robust programs in place to upskill workers.
Even Vance’s own ties raise eyebrows. Major Silicon Valley investors tied to the administration, such as Marc Andreessen—who’s funding AI startups explicitly aiming to replace human tasks—don’t exactly share a “jobs for all” philosophy. That puts the administration in the awkward position of championing workers while also championing the very technologies that could automate them out of existence.
Among all the grand speeches, the biggest looming question remains: What happens to workers? Vance’s closing remarks stressed that AI “will facilitate and make people more productive” and that “most immediate applications … involve supplementing, not replacing the work being done by Americans.”
Emphasis on “most immediate,” notes Roetzer.
In plain English, it seems the administration knows the displacement issue isn’t going away but hopes it can buy some time. Vance promised “the best trained workforce in the world” and said schools would teach students how to use AI.
Yet details are scarce on how, when, or if the White House will actually fund and roll out such initiatives.
“This was always the underlying current among tech’s biggest players: deregulation, minimal oversight, and letting the market move as fast as possible,” says Roetzer. “But hearing it spelled out so bluntly by the vice president—on a global stage, in a short but hard-hitting speech—was jarring to a lot of people in the AI community.”
If you’re pro-acceleration, it’s music to your ears: The US basically just said, ‘Full speed ahead, don’t slow us down.’ If you’re pro-regulation, you may be alarmed, especially since the administration’s official line is that safety concerns shouldn’t overshadow innovation.
In short, JD Vance’s Paris AI address wasn’t just a passing political speech. It signaled even more commitment to a major stance from the current administration:
AI safety is taking a backseat to AI opportunity. That stance sets up a global showdown over how—and how fast—we bring this powerful technology to life.