The Innovation Framing
Rep. Brett Guthrie (R-KY) used a House Energy and Commerce Committee hearing on Tuesday to frame America's autonomous vehicle policy as fundamentally about innovation, not regulation. The distinction matters to him because it changes who the competition is.
"We compete with them [China] in so many ways, AI and all the other things," Guthrie said during the hearing. His point was sharp: the US isn't competing with Europe "to regulate" but is instead "competing with China to innovate."
That framing helps justify what Guthrie really wants, which is a national standard for autonomous vehicles. Self-driving cars don't respect state borders, he argued, making this issue "clearly within our jurisdiction" at the federal level. It's a practical argument dressed up in geopolitical language.
Easing the Regulatory Path
Guthrie's committee had been promoting the idea of relaxed self-driving regulations ahead of Tuesday's hearing. The timing fits with Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy's plans to reduce regulatory obstacles by proposing amendments to the Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards.
This connects to a broader push under President Donald Trump for vehicle affordability. Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) has scheduled his own hearing with executives from major US automakers to discuss whether certain safety features like rear seat occupant alert and automatic emergency braking are driving up costs unnecessarily.




