
The U.S. Senate has reportedly approved the official use of three AI chatbots: ChatGPT from OpenAI, Gemini from Google, and Copilot, according to a report by The New York Times. These AI tools are expected to be deeply integrated into Senate platforms to assist officials in drafting documents, conducting research, summarizing content, and preparing briefings, thereby reducing time spent on repetitive tasks.
The adoption of AI by government institutions highlights how the technology is moving beyond the private sector and becoming a key tool in legislative, administrative, and defense operations.
While Microsoft awaits final approval, Google and OpenAI have not yet issued official confirmations.
Alongside the Senate, the U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) is also leveraging OpenAI’s AI models. In February 2026, OpenAI finalized a deal to deploy its models on the DoD’s classified networks.
In addition, Google launched Agentic Designer within GenAI.mil on March 9, allowing users to create custom AI agents that automate tasks such as taking meeting notes, generating action items, and producing step-by-step plans for effective project management in natural language.
Meanwhile, Anthropic is challenging the Trump administration over its “supply-chain risk” label, filing a lawsuit against the designation. The tech industry has shown support, with employees from OpenAI, Google, and other companies drafting a formal letter backing the AI startup in its legal battle.
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