S. 1775 (119th)Bill Overview

Protecting AI and Cloud Competition in Defense Act of 2025

Armed Forces and National Security|Armed Forces and National Security
Cosponsors
Support
Bipartisan
Introduced
May 15, 2025
Discussions
Bill Text
Current stageCommittee

Read twice and referred to the Committee on Armed Services.

Introduced
Committee
Floor
President
Law
Congressional Activities
01 · The brief

The bill directs the Department of Defense to require competitive procurement and other safeguards when buying cloud computing, data infrastructure, or foundation models.

It requires the government to retain exclusive rights to government data and updates DFARS to prohibit vendors from using government-furnished data to train commercial AI without authorization.

The bill prioritizes multi-cloud and modular open systems, mandates penalties for violations, allows narrow national-security exemptions, and requires annual public reports on competition and market concentration in defense AI.

Passage48/100

Moderate chance: sectoral, technocratic bill with built‑in flexibility, but faces industry lobbying and possible intercommittee amendment/friction.

CredibilityPartially aligned

Relative to its intended legislative type, this bill is a substantive policy change focused on Department of Defense procurement of cloud, data infrastructure, and foundation models, with a secondary reporting mandate. It contains clear objectives, defined terminology, and assigned authorities, but leaves several operational, fiscal, and enforcement details unspecified.

Contention65/100

Data-use restrictions: liberals welcome protection, conservatives fear vendor flight

02 · What it does

Who stands to gain, and who may push back.

Who this appears to help vs burden50% / 50%
Targeted stakeholdersTargeted stakeholders
Likely helped
  • Targeted stakeholdersReduces vendor lock‑in by prioritizing competitive awards and multi‑cloud architectures.
  • Targeted stakeholdersProtects government data and IP by prohibiting use of Government‑furnished data for commercial model training.
  • Targeted stakeholdersEnhances resilience and interoperability through modular open systems and multi‑cloud technology preference.
Likely burdened
  • Targeted stakeholdersMay increase procurement time and costs due to mandated competitive processes and expanded requirements.
  • Targeted stakeholdersRaises compliance and administrative burdens for vendors complying with DFARS updates and data protections.
  • Targeted stakeholdersRestricting commercial use of government data may reduce private sector incentives to invest in models.
03 · Why people split

Why the argument around this bill splits.

Data-use restrictions: liberals welcome protection, conservatives fear vendor flight
Progressive85%

Overall supportive: the bill tries to curb Big Tech concentration, protect government data, and open opportunities for smaller vendors.

It aligns with goals to keep public data from strengthening proprietary commercial models without authorization, though enforcement strength matters.

Leans supportive
Centrist60%

Cautiously favorable: the bill balances competition and security aims but raises practical procurement and cost questions.

Support hinges on clear implementation timelines, measurable cost and risk analyses, and narrow, well-documented exemptions.

Split reaction
Conservative30%

Skeptical: while supportive of protecting national-security data, concerned the bill overregulates procurement and undermines partnerships with major cloud vendors.

Worries include higher costs, reduced innovation, and increased bureaucracy.

Likely resistant
04 · Can it pass?

The path through Congress.

Introduced

Reached or meaningfully advanced

Committee

Reached or meaningfully advanced

Floor

Still ahead

President

Still ahead

Law

Still ahead

Passage likelihood48/100

Moderate chance: sectoral, technocratic bill with built‑in flexibility, but faces industry lobbying and possible intercommittee amendment/friction.

Scope and complexity
52%
Scopemoderate
52%
Complexitymedium
Why this could stall
  • Absent cost estimate or CBO score
  • Industry lobbying intensity and legal challenges
05 · Recent votes

Recent votes on the bill.

No vote history yet

The bill has not accumulated any surfaced votes yet.

06 · Go deeper

Go deeper than the headline read.

Included on this page

Data-use restrictions: liberals welcome protection, conservatives fear vendor flight

Moderate chance: sectoral, technocratic bill with built‑in flexibility, but faces industry lobbying and possible intercommittee amendment/f…

Unlocked analysis

Relative to its intended legislative type, this bill is a substantive policy change focused on Department of Defense procurement of cloud, data infrastructure, and foundation models, with a secondary reporting mandate.…

Go beyond the headline summary with full stakeholder mapping, legislative design analysis, passage barriers, and lens-by-lens tradeoff breakdowns.

Perspective breakdownsPassage barriersLegislative design reviewStakeholder impact map
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