Federal · House Bill · 118th Congress, 2nd Session
HR8668
H.R. 8668 — AI Transparency in Elections Act of 2024

Status ● Failed Effective N/A Passage Likelihood N/A

WHAT THIS BILL REGULATES · 1 REQUIREMENT TYPE

How Is This Bill Enforced

Enforcement Authority
Federal Election Commission (FEC) enforcement. The FEC administers a schedule of civil money penalties for violations of the qualified disclaimer requirement. Complaints are processed under existing FECA complaint and conciliation procedures (52 U.S.C. § 30109). Failure to timely respond to an FEC notice of alleged violation constitutes admission of factual allegations. Judicial review is available on a shortened 45-day timeline for complaints alleging violations of the AI disclaimer requirement.
Private Right of Action
No private right of action. Enforcement is exclusive to the designated authority.
Penalties
Civil money penalties up to $50,000 per covered communication, determined under a schedule established and published by the FEC that takes into account previous violations, breadth of distribution, and other factors the Commission considers appropriate.

What This Bill Requires

Verbatim statutory text on the left; plain-language analysis and a per-section checklist on the right. Numbered markers cross-link to the matching checklist row.

Statutory Text
Analysis & Obligations
Section 1
Short Title

This Act may be cited as the ''AI Transparency in Elections Act of 2024''.

Establishes the short title of the Act as the AI Transparency in Elections Act of 2024.

52 U.S.C. § 30120(e)
AI disclaimer requirement for political advertisements
Publisher

(e)(1)(A) The term 'covered communicationCovered communicationThe term 'covered communication' means a communication through any broadcasting station, newspaper, magazine, outdoor advertising facility, mailing, telephone bank, internet or other digital medium, or any other type of general public political advertising that— (I) expressly advocates for or against the nomination or election of a candidate; (II) refers to a candidate at any time during the period beginning 120 days before the date of a primary election or nominating caucus or convention and ending on the date on which a general election occurs; or (III) solicits a contribution for a candidate or political committee or any other person who makes disbursements for communications described in subclause (I) or (II). A communication that invokes the likeness or voice of a candidate shall be treated as a communication that refers to such candidate.52 U.S.C. § 30120(e)(1)(A)' means a communication through any broadcasting station, newspaper, magazine, outdoor advertising facility, mailing, telephone bank, internet or other digital medium, or any other type of general public political advertising that— (I) expressly advocates for or against the nomination or election of a candidate; (II) refers to a candidate at any time during the period beginning 120 days before the date of a primary election or nominating caucus or convention and ending on the date on which a general election occurs; or (III) solicits a contribution for a candidate or political committee or any other person who makes disbursements for communications described in subclause (I) or (II). A communication that invokes the likeness or voice of a candidate shall be treated as a communication that refers to such candidate.

(e)(1)(B) The term 'generative artificial intelligenceGenerative artificial intelligenceThe term 'generative artificial intelligence' means artificial intelligence technology that uses machine learning (including deep-learning models, natural language processing, or other computational processing techniques of similar or greater complexity) to generate text, images, audio, video, or other media.52 U.S.C. § 30120(e)(1)(B)' means artificial intelligence technology that uses machine learning (including deep-learning models, natural language processing, or other computational processing techniques of similar or greater complexity) to generate text, images, audio, video, or other media.

(e)(1)(C) The term 'substantially generated by artificial intelligenceSubstantially generated by artificial intelligenceThe term 'substantially generated by artificial intelligence' means an image, audio, or video that was created or materially altered using generative artificial intelligence. Such term does not include an image, audio, or video that— (I) has only minor alterations by generative artificial intelligence (including cosmetic adjustments, color editing, cropping, resizing, and other immaterial uses); and (II) does not create a fundamentally different understanding than a reasonable person would have from an unaltered version of the media.52 U.S.C. § 30120(e)(1)(C)' means an image, audio, or video that was created or materially altered using generative artificial intelligenceGenerative artificial intelligenceThe term 'generative artificial intelligence' means artificial intelligence technology that uses machine learning (including deep-learning models, natural language processing, or other computational processing techniques of similar or greater complexity) to generate text, images, audio, video, or other media.52 U.S.C. § 30120(e)(1)(B). Such term does not include an image, audio, or video that— (I) has only minor alterations by generative artificial intelligenceGenerative artificial intelligenceThe term 'generative artificial intelligence' means artificial intelligence technology that uses machine learning (including deep-learning models, natural language processing, or other computational processing techniques of similar or greater complexity) to generate text, images, audio, video, or other media.52 U.S.C. § 30120(e)(1)(B) (including cosmetic adjustments, color editing, cropping, resizing, and other immaterial uses); and (II) does not create a fundamentally different understanding than a reasonable person would have from an unaltered version of the media.

(e)(2) 1 When a person makes a disbursement for the purpose of financing a covered communicationCovered communicationThe term 'covered communication' means a communication through any broadcasting station, newspaper, magazine, outdoor advertising facility, mailing, telephone bank, internet or other digital medium, or any other type of general public political advertising that— (I) expressly advocates for or against the nomination or election of a candidate; (II) refers to a candidate at any time during the period beginning 120 days before the date of a primary election or nominating caucus or convention and ending on the date on which a general election occurs; or (III) solicits a contribution for a candidate or political committee or any other person who makes disbursements for communications described in subclause (I) or (II). A communication that invokes the likeness or voice of a candidate shall be treated as a communication that refers to such candidate.52 U.S.C. § 30120(e)(1)(A) containing an image, audio, or video that was substantially generated by artificial intelligenceSubstantially generated by artificial intelligenceThe term 'substantially generated by artificial intelligence' means an image, audio, or video that was created or materially altered using generative artificial intelligence. Such term does not include an image, audio, or video that— (I) has only minor alterations by generative artificial intelligence (including cosmetic adjustments, color editing, cropping, resizing, and other immaterial uses); and (II) does not create a fundamentally different understanding than a reasonable person would have from an unaltered version of the media.52 U.S.C. § 30120(e)(1)(C), the covered communicationCovered communicationThe term 'covered communication' means a communication through any broadcasting station, newspaper, magazine, outdoor advertising facility, mailing, telephone bank, internet or other digital medium, or any other type of general public political advertising that— (I) expressly advocates for or against the nomination or election of a candidate; (II) refers to a candidate at any time during the period beginning 120 days before the date of a primary election or nominating caucus or convention and ending on the date on which a general election occurs; or (III) solicits a contribution for a candidate or political committee or any other person who makes disbursements for communications described in subclause (I) or (II). A communication that invokes the likeness or voice of a candidate shall be treated as a communication that refers to such candidate.52 U.S.C. § 30120(e)(1)(A) shall include, in a clear and conspicuous manner, a statement that the covered communicationCovered communicationThe term 'covered communication' means a communication through any broadcasting station, newspaper, magazine, outdoor advertising facility, mailing, telephone bank, internet or other digital medium, or any other type of general public political advertising that— (I) expressly advocates for or against the nomination or election of a candidate; (II) refers to a candidate at any time during the period beginning 120 days before the date of a primary election or nominating caucus or convention and ending on the date on which a general election occurs; or (III) solicits a contribution for a candidate or political committee or any other person who makes disbursements for communications described in subclause (I) or (II). A communication that invokes the likeness or voice of a candidate shall be treated as a communication that refers to such candidate.52 U.S.C. § 30120(e)(1)(A) contains such an image, audio, or video.

(e)(3) 1 A statement required under this subsection shall be considered to be made in a clear and conspicuous manner if the statement meets the following requirements: (A) IMAGE COVERED COMMUNICATIONSCovered communicationThe term 'covered communication' means a communication through any broadcasting station, newspaper, magazine, outdoor advertising facility, mailing, telephone bank, internet or other digital medium, or any other type of general public political advertising that— (I) expressly advocates for or against the nomination or election of a candidate; (II) refers to a candidate at any time during the period beginning 120 days before the date of a primary election or nominating caucus or convention and ending on the date on which a general election occurs; or (III) solicits a contribution for a candidate or political committee or any other person who makes disbursements for communications described in subclause (I) or (II). A communication that invokes the likeness or voice of a candidate shall be treated as a communication that refers to such candidate.52 U.S.C. § 30120(e)(1)(A).—In the case of an image that is a covered communicationCovered communicationThe term 'covered communication' means a communication through any broadcasting station, newspaper, magazine, outdoor advertising facility, mailing, telephone bank, internet or other digital medium, or any other type of general public political advertising that— (I) expressly advocates for or against the nomination or election of a candidate; (II) refers to a candidate at any time during the period beginning 120 days before the date of a primary election or nominating caucus or convention and ending on the date on which a general election occurs; or (III) solicits a contribution for a candidate or political committee or any other person who makes disbursements for communications described in subclause (I) or (II). A communication that invokes the likeness or voice of a candidate shall be treated as a communication that refers to such candidate.52 U.S.C. § 30120(e)(1)(A), the statement— (i) appears in letters at least as large as the majority of the text in the covered communicationCovered communicationThe term 'covered communication' means a communication through any broadcasting station, newspaper, magazine, outdoor advertising facility, mailing, telephone bank, internet or other digital medium, or any other type of general public political advertising that— (I) expressly advocates for or against the nomination or election of a candidate; (II) refers to a candidate at any time during the period beginning 120 days before the date of a primary election or nominating caucus or convention and ending on the date on which a general election occurs; or (III) solicits a contribution for a candidate or political committee or any other person who makes disbursements for communications described in subclause (I) or (II). A communication that invokes the likeness or voice of a candidate shall be treated as a communication that refers to such candidate.52 U.S.C. § 30120(e)(1)(A) or otherwise meets the requirements under subsection (c)(1); (ii) meets the requirements of paragraphs (2) and (3) of subsection (c); (iii) states that the covered communicationCovered communicationThe term 'covered communication' means a communication through any broadcasting station, newspaper, magazine, outdoor advertising facility, mailing, telephone bank, internet or other digital medium, or any other type of general public political advertising that— (I) expressly advocates for or against the nomination or election of a candidate; (II) refers to a candidate at any time during the period beginning 120 days before the date of a primary election or nominating caucus or convention and ending on the date on which a general election occurs; or (III) solicits a contribution for a candidate or political committee or any other person who makes disbursements for communications described in subclause (I) or (II). A communication that invokes the likeness or voice of a candidate shall be treated as a communication that refers to such candidate.52 U.S.C. § 30120(e)(1)(A) was created or materially altered by artificial intelligence; and (iv) is permanently affixed to the covered communicationCovered communicationThe term 'covered communication' means a communication through any broadcasting station, newspaper, magazine, outdoor advertising facility, mailing, telephone bank, internet or other digital medium, or any other type of general public political advertising that— (I) expressly advocates for or against the nomination or election of a candidate; (II) refers to a candidate at any time during the period beginning 120 days before the date of a primary election or nominating caucus or convention and ending on the date on which a general election occurs; or (III) solicits a contribution for a candidate or political committee or any other person who makes disbursements for communications described in subclause (I) or (II). A communication that invokes the likeness or voice of a candidate shall be treated as a communication that refers to such candidate.52 U.S.C. § 30120(e)(1)(A). (B) AUDIO COVERED COMMUNICATIONSCovered communicationThe term 'covered communication' means a communication through any broadcasting station, newspaper, magazine, outdoor advertising facility, mailing, telephone bank, internet or other digital medium, or any other type of general public political advertising that— (I) expressly advocates for or against the nomination or election of a candidate; (II) refers to a candidate at any time during the period beginning 120 days before the date of a primary election or nominating caucus or convention and ending on the date on which a general election occurs; or (III) solicits a contribution for a candidate or political committee or any other person who makes disbursements for communications described in subclause (I) or (II). A communication that invokes the likeness or voice of a candidate shall be treated as a communication that refers to such candidate.52 U.S.C. § 30120(e)(1)(A).—In the case of an audio covered communicationCovered communicationThe term 'covered communication' means a communication through any broadcasting station, newspaper, magazine, outdoor advertising facility, mailing, telephone bank, internet or other digital medium, or any other type of general public political advertising that— (I) expressly advocates for or against the nomination or election of a candidate; (II) refers to a candidate at any time during the period beginning 120 days before the date of a primary election or nominating caucus or convention and ending on the date on which a general election occurs; or (III) solicits a contribution for a candidate or political committee or any other person who makes disbursements for communications described in subclause (I) or (II). A communication that invokes the likeness or voice of a candidate shall be treated as a communication that refers to such candidate.52 U.S.C. § 30120(e)(1)(A), the statement— (i) is spoken in a clearly audible and intelligible manner at the beginning or end of the covered communicationCovered communicationThe term 'covered communication' means a communication through any broadcasting station, newspaper, magazine, outdoor advertising facility, mailing, telephone bank, internet or other digital medium, or any other type of general public political advertising that— (I) expressly advocates for or against the nomination or election of a candidate; (II) refers to a candidate at any time during the period beginning 120 days before the date of a primary election or nominating caucus or convention and ending on the date on which a general election occurs; or (III) solicits a contribution for a candidate or political committee or any other person who makes disbursements for communications described in subclause (I) or (II). A communication that invokes the likeness or voice of a candidate shall be treated as a communication that refers to such candidate.52 U.S.C. § 30120(e)(1)(A) and lasts not fewer than 4 seconds; and (ii) includes the following audio statement in a clearly spoken manner: '_______ used artificial intelligence to generate the contents of this communication.' (with the blank filled in with the name of person who made the disbursement to pay for such covered communicationCovered communicationThe term 'covered communication' means a communication through any broadcasting station, newspaper, magazine, outdoor advertising facility, mailing, telephone bank, internet or other digital medium, or any other type of general public political advertising that— (I) expressly advocates for or against the nomination or election of a candidate; (II) refers to a candidate at any time during the period beginning 120 days before the date of a primary election or nominating caucus or convention and ending on the date on which a general election occurs; or (III) solicits a contribution for a candidate or political committee or any other person who makes disbursements for communications described in subclause (I) or (II). A communication that invokes the likeness or voice of a candidate shall be treated as a communication that refers to such candidate.52 U.S.C. § 30120(e)(1)(A)). (C) VIDEO COVERED COMMUNICATIONSCovered communicationThe term 'covered communication' means a communication through any broadcasting station, newspaper, magazine, outdoor advertising facility, mailing, telephone bank, internet or other digital medium, or any other type of general public political advertising that— (I) expressly advocates for or against the nomination or election of a candidate; (II) refers to a candidate at any time during the period beginning 120 days before the date of a primary election or nominating caucus or convention and ending on the date on which a general election occurs; or (III) solicits a contribution for a candidate or political committee or any other person who makes disbursements for communications described in subclause (I) or (II). A communication that invokes the likeness or voice of a candidate shall be treated as a communication that refers to such candidate.52 U.S.C. § 30120(e)(1)(A).—In the case of a video covered communicationCovered communicationThe term 'covered communication' means a communication through any broadcasting station, newspaper, magazine, outdoor advertising facility, mailing, telephone bank, internet or other digital medium, or any other type of general public political advertising that— (I) expressly advocates for or against the nomination or election of a candidate; (II) refers to a candidate at any time during the period beginning 120 days before the date of a primary election or nominating caucus or convention and ending on the date on which a general election occurs; or (III) solicits a contribution for a candidate or political committee or any other person who makes disbursements for communications described in subclause (I) or (II). A communication that invokes the likeness or voice of a candidate shall be treated as a communication that refers to such candidate.52 U.S.C. § 30120(e)(1)(A) that also includes audio, the statement is made both in— (i) a written format that meets the requirements of subparagraph (A) and appears throughout the length of the video covered communicationCovered communicationThe term 'covered communication' means a communication through any broadcasting station, newspaper, magazine, outdoor advertising facility, mailing, telephone bank, internet or other digital medium, or any other type of general public political advertising that— (I) expressly advocates for or against the nomination or election of a candidate; (II) refers to a candidate at any time during the period beginning 120 days before the date of a primary election or nominating caucus or convention and ending on the date on which a general election occurs; or (III) solicits a contribution for a candidate or political committee or any other person who makes disbursements for communications described in subclause (I) or (II). A communication that invokes the likeness or voice of a candidate shall be treated as a communication that refers to such candidate.52 U.S.C. § 30120(e)(1)(A); and (ii) an audible format that meets the requirements of subparagraph (B).

This is the bill's core operative section, adding a new subsection (e) to Section 318 of the Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971. It defines three key terms — covered communication, generative artificial intelligence, and substantially generated by artificial intelligence — and then imposes a single primary obligation: any person financing a covered communication that contains AI-generated images, audio, or video must include a clear and conspicuous statement disclosing that fact.

The section then provides a detailed safe harbor specifying what qualifies as clear and conspicuous for each medium. For image communications, the disclaimer must be permanently affixed, in text at least as large as the majority of the communication's text, and must state the communication was created or materially altered by AI. For audio communications, the disclaimer must be spoken clearly for at least 4 seconds, naming the disbursing person. For video communications with audio, the disclaimer must appear in both written form (throughout the video) and audible form. The carve-out for minor cosmetic alterations — color editing, cropping, resizing — that do not create a fundamentally different understanding ensures the requirement targets only material AI-generated content.

Compliance actions 1 item
1
Any person financing a political advertisement that contains AI-generated or AI-materially-altered images, audio, or video must include a clear and conspicuous disclaimer stating that the communication contains such content. For images the disclaimer must be permanently affixed in text at least as large as the majority of the communication's text; for audio the disclaimer must be spoken for at least 4 seconds naming the disbursing person; for video with audio the disclaimer must appear in both written and audible form throughout. A safe harbor excludes minor cosmetic alterations that do not create a fundamentally different understanding.
CP-01.6
52 U.S.C. § 30109(a)(4)(C)
Enforcement penalties and procedures

(b)(1) Section 309(a)(4)(C)(i) of the Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971 (52 U.S.C. 30109(a)(4)(C)(i)) is amended— (A) in the matter before subclause (I), by inserting ''or a qualified disclaimer requirementQualified disclaimer requirementIn this subparagraph, the term 'qualified disclaimer requirement' means the requirement of section 318(e)(2).52 U.S.C. § 30109(a)(4)(C)(v)'' after ''a qualified disclosure requirement''; and (B) on subclause (II)— (i) by striking ''a civil money penalty in an amount determined, for violations of each qualified disclosure requirement'' and inserting ''a civil money penalty— ''(aa) for violations of each qualified disclosure requirement, in an amount determined''; (ii) by striking the period at the end and inserting ''; and''; and (iii) by adding at the end the following new item: ''(bb) for violations of each qualified disclaimer requirementQualified disclaimer requirementIn this subparagraph, the term 'qualified disclaimer requirement' means the requirement of section 318(e)(2).52 U.S.C. § 30109(a)(4)(C)(v), in an amount which is determined under a schedule of penalties which is established and published by the Commission and which takes into account the existence of previous violations by the person and how broadly the communication is distributed and such other factors as the Commission considers appropriate, provided that any such civil penalty shall not exceed $50,000 per covered communicationCovered communicationThe term 'covered communication' means a communication through any broadcasting station, newspaper, magazine, outdoor advertising facility, mailing, telephone bank, internet or other digital medium, or any other type of general public political advertising that— (I) expressly advocates for or against the nomination or election of a candidate; (II) refers to a candidate at any time during the period beginning 120 days before the date of a primary election or nominating caucus or convention and ending on the date on which a general election occurs; or (III) solicits a contribution for a candidate or political committee or any other person who makes disbursements for communications described in subclause (I) or (II). A communication that invokes the likeness or voice of a candidate shall be treated as a communication that refers to such candidate.52 U.S.C. § 30120(e)(1)(A).''.

(b)(2) Section 309(a)(4)(C)(ii) of such Act (52 U.S.C. 30109(a)(4)(C)(ii)) is amended by striking the period at the end and inserting '', except that in the case of a violation of a qualified disclaimer requirementQualified disclaimer requirementIn this subparagraph, the term 'qualified disclaimer requirement' means the requirement of section 318(e)(2).52 U.S.C. § 30109(a)(4)(C)(v), failure to timely respond after the Commission has notified the person of an alleged violation under subsection (a)(1) shall constitute the person's admission of the factual allegations of the complaint.''.

(b)(3) Section 309(a)(4)(C) of such Act (52 U.S.C. 30109(a)(4)(C)) is amended by redesignating clause (v) as clause (vi) and by inserting after clause (iv) the following new clause: ''(v) In this subparagraph, the term 'qualified disclaimer requirementQualified disclaimer requirementIn this subparagraph, the term 'qualified disclaimer requirement' means the requirement of section 318(e)(2).52 U.S.C. § 30109(a)(4)(C)(v)' means the requirement of section 318(e)(2).''.

(b)(4) Clause (vi) of section 309(a)(4)(C) of such Act (52 U.S.C. 30109(a)(4)(C)), as redesignated by paragraph (3), is amended— (A) by striking ''shall apply with respect to violations'' and inserting ''shall apply— ''(I) with respect to violations of qualified disclosure requirements''; (B) by striking the period at the end and inserting ''; and''; and (C) by adding at the end the following new subclause: ''(II) with respect to violations of qualified disclaimer requirementsQualified disclaimer requirementIn this subparagraph, the term 'qualified disclaimer requirement' means the requirement of section 318(e)(2).52 U.S.C. § 30109(a)(4)(C)(v) occurring on or after the date of the enactment of the AI Transparency in Elections Act of 2024.''.

(b)(5) Section 309(a)(8)(A) of the Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971 (52 U.S.C. 30109(a)(8)(A)) is amended by inserting ''(45-day period in the case of any complaint alleging a violation of section 318(e)(2))'' after ''120-day period''.

Section 2(b) amends the FECA enforcement provisions to create a parallel penalty track for violations of the new AI disclaimer requirement. The FEC must establish and publish a penalty schedule for violations of the qualified disclaimer requirement, capping civil penalties at $50,000 per covered communication. The schedule must account for prior violations, breadth of distribution, and other relevant factors. A failure to timely respond to an FEC notice of alleged violation constitutes an admission of the factual allegations — a more aggressive default than the standard FECA enforcement procedure. Judicial review complaints under the new disclaimer requirement receive a shortened 45-day review period instead of the standard 120 days.

Section 2(c)
FEC rulemaking requirement

(c) 2 Not later than 90 days after the date of enactment of the AI Transparency in Elections Act of 2024, the Federal Election Commission shall, in consultation with the Director of the National Institute of Standards and Technology, promulgate a regulation to carry out the amendments made by subsections (a) and (b), including— (1) criteria for determining whether a covered communicationCovered communicationThe term 'covered communication' means a communication through any broadcasting station, newspaper, magazine, outdoor advertising facility, mailing, telephone bank, internet or other digital medium, or any other type of general public political advertising that— (I) expressly advocates for or against the nomination or election of a candidate; (II) refers to a candidate at any time during the period beginning 120 days before the date of a primary election or nominating caucus or convention and ending on the date on which a general election occurs; or (III) solicits a contribution for a candidate or political committee or any other person who makes disbursements for communications described in subclause (I) or (II). A communication that invokes the likeness or voice of a candidate shall be treated as a communication that refers to such candidate.52 U.S.C. § 30120(e)(1)(A) (as defined in section 318(e) of the Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971, as added by subsection (a)) contains an image, audio, or video substantially generated by artificial intelligenceSubstantially generated by artificial intelligenceThe term 'substantially generated by artificial intelligence' means an image, audio, or video that was created or materially altered using generative artificial intelligence. Such term does not include an image, audio, or video that— (I) has only minor alterations by generative artificial intelligence (including cosmetic adjustments, color editing, cropping, resizing, and other immaterial uses); and (II) does not create a fundamentally different understanding than a reasonable person would have from an unaltered version of the media.52 U.S.C. § 30120(e)(1)(C) (as defined in such section); and (2) requirements for the contents of the statement required under section 318(e)(2) of the Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971, as added by subsection (a).

(d) The amendments made by this section shall— (1) apply with respect to any communication made after the date of enactment of this Act; and (2) take effect without regard to whether the Federal Election Commission has promulgated regulations to carry out such amendments.

Directs the Federal Election Commission to promulgate implementing regulations within 90 days of enactment, in consultation with the Director of NIST. The regulations must cover criteria for determining whether a covered communication contains AI-substantially-generated content and the required contents of the disclaimer statement. Notably, subsection (d) provides that the disclosure obligation takes effect immediately upon enactment and does not depend on whether the FEC has completed its rulemaking.

Section 3
Biannual FEC reports to Congress

3 Not later than 2 years after the date of enactment of this Act, and biannually thereafter, the Federal Election Commission shall submit a report to the Committee on Rules and Administration of the Senate and the Committee on House Administration of the House of Representatives that includes— (1) an assessment of the compliance with and the enforcement of the requirements of subsection (e) of section 318 of the Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971, as added by this Act; and (2) recommendations for any modifications to that subsection to assist in carrying out the purposes of that subsection.

Requires the FEC to submit biannual reports to the Senate Committee on Rules and Administration and the House Committee on House Administration, beginning no later than two years after enactment. The reports must assess compliance with and enforcement of the AI disclaimer requirement and recommend any modifications. This is a government-to-government reporting obligation that does not create compliance duties for private parties.

Section 4
Severability

If any provision of this Act or any amendment made by this Act, or the application of any such provision or amendment to any person or circumstance, is held to be unconstitutional, the remainder of this Act, and the application of such provision or amendment to any other person or circumstance, shall not be affected by the holding.

Standard severability clause providing that if any provision of the Act is held unconstitutional, the remainder of the Act and its application to other persons or circumstances shall not be affected.

Passage Likelihood

Failed
Status Failed
Final action Referred to the House Committee on House Administration.

Legislative History

2024-06-07 Introduced in House
2024-06-07 Referred to the House Committee on House Administration.

Sources

No sources on file

Entry Last Reviewed

2026-05-16
AI generated