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Science

House Committee Shapes NASA, AI Tech Future – Legis1

Editorial Staff
Last updated: April 29, 2026 4:09 pm
Editorial Staff
11 hours ago
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The House Science, Space, and Technology Committee convenes today, April 29, for a full committee markup, putting science and technology policy on the legislative assembly line at a moment when NASA’s future, artificial intelligence governance, semiconductor competitiveness, and federal research funding are all in flux. What the committee advances today could shape agency budgets, research priorities, and the U.S. position in the global technology race for years ahead.
The markup arrives weeks after the Artemis II mission captured the world’s attention, with members on both sides of the aisle publicly celebrating the mission’s success and calling for sustained investment in space exploration. That bipartisan enthusiasm now meets the harder work of translating priorities into legislation.
Multiple lobbying filings targeting the committee’s jurisdiction cite S. 933, the NASA Transition Authorization Act of 2025, along with fiscal year 2026 Commerce, Justice, and Science appropriations as priority concerns. One filing reported spending $100,000 on issues related to NASA science, aeronautics, exploration account funding, and both S. 933 and H.R. 7273, the NASA Reauthorization Act of 2026.
Filings focused on space robotics and lunar surface technology have also been submitted, with organizations reporting spending to support space robotics funding for lunar applications and aerospace propulsion testing in the fiscal year 2026 appropriations cycle.
Rep. Emilia Sykes and Rep. Baird both posted about the Artemis II mission in early April, framing it as a case for continued investment. Rep. Valerie Foushee cited the Space and Aeronautics Subcommittee’s work on Artemis II, while also raising concerns about NASA funding and federal science research initiatives.
Artificial intelligence and robotics have sparked some of the most active lobbying. One filing reported $70,000 in spending covering AI and innovation, AI in defense manufacturing, AI in health care, and AI in financial services. Others focused on advanced technology, robotics, and automation in the context of workforce and logistics policy.
Rep. Jay Obernolte’s recent subcommittee hearing on robotics and AI, and Rep. Rich McCormick’s public posts on technology innovation and AI advancement, add more insights into this debate.
Quantum computing has also drawn lobbying attention, with filings citing the National Quantum Initiative Act reauthorization, quantum computing policy, and post-quantum cryptography as active concerns, alongside cybersecurity and secure AI governance.
Multiple lobbying filings in the past year have targeted the committee’s jurisdiction on semiconductor manufacturing and CHIPS implementation, with reported spending ranging from $40,000 to $50,000 per filing. One filing specifically cited issues around the development of next-generation semiconductor chips alongside CHIPS Act implementation.
Export controls and AI server manufacturing also appeared in recent filings, with one organization reporting $20,000 in spending on export controls, AI, and server manufacturing tax incentives.
Filings targeting National Science Foundation (NSF) appropriations and the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) fiscal year 2026 funding have reported spending ranging from $10,000 to $50,000. Another filing covered NSF geoscience issues and AI literacy alongside a sub-seafloor sampling program.
STEM education and workforce development have generated their own cluster of filings, with organizations reporting $30,000 to $50,000 in spending on federal STEM education funding, the Education Sciences Reform Act, AI literacy, and National Defense Authorization Act education programs.
Rep. Baird highlighted the Tech Diplomacy Training Act and STEM education in a mid-April post. Rep. Suzanne Bonamici posted about the committee’s work on science research and data evaluation.
Rep. James Baird posted about a recent committee hearing with the NASA Administrator covering space and earth science. Rep. Scott Franklin weighed in on science integrity and EPA greenhouse gas study review.
The committee meeting this afternoon is chaired by Rep. Brian Babin, with Rep. Zoe Lofgren serving as ranking member.
Access the Legis1 platform for comprehensive political news, data, and insights.
Daily alerts, original reporting, and intelligence customized to the lawmakers, organizations, and issues you track.

source

AI model predicts chemical effects on gene expression, speeding drug discovery – Phys.org
A surprising foam discovery could change everyday products – ScienceDaily
Where is Artemis II right now? Track the astronauts returning from the moon – Mashable
Will world’s largest probe make us lose trust in research findings? – CORDIS
Bruker Spatial Biology Showcases High Fidelity Spatial Data and Integrated Multi-platform Workflows for Unprecedented Multiomic Insights at AACR 2026 – BioSpace
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