Senator Ron Wyden (D-OR), ranking member of the Senate Finance Committee, told Bloomberg on March 3 that he plans to “pull out all the stops” to fight the Trump administration’s federal ban on Anthropic. Wyden said he is actively seeking bipartisan support for legislation to address what he called government retaliation against a company for maintaining AI safety commitments.
This is a direct escalation. Five days after the White House ordered all federal agencies to phase out Anthropic products within six months, the dispute has moved from executive action to a potential legislative fight. Anthropic has already stated it will challenge the Pentagon’s supply-chain risk designation in court, and 11 OpenAI employees signed an open letter opposing the federal action.
No bill text exists yet. Wyden’s announcement is a pledge, not an introduction. Senator Mark Warner (D-VA) also condemned the ban, but no Republican senators have publicly commented. Whether bipartisan support materializes remains uncertain.
Rep. Zoe Lofgren’s companion legislation in the House and Rep. Ro Khanna’s Defense Production Act amendment to bar agency retaliation add Congressional pressure from multiple directions simultaneously.
The speed here matters. From contract dispute to executive ban to Congressional legislative response in under a week. That timeline signals this isn’t a procurement disagreement. It’s becoming a defining fight over whether the federal government can punish AI companies for maintaining safety policies.