Tony is a Principal Policy Advisor who represents clients before the US Congress and federal agencies. Based in Washington, DC, he focuses on formulating, synthesizing and executing complex business development and risk mitigation strategies for senior policymakers and business executives.
Tony is among the foremost advisors in the US on issues related to national security, artificial intelligence (AI), robotics, space, and emerging technology.
Samp is a regular thought contributor to leading media publications including Wall Street Journal, TIME, Washington Post, Financial Times, Bloomberg, Axios, Politico, The Hill, and others.
Washingtonian Magazine, over consecutive years, has named Samp to its list of the 500 Most Influential People in Washington, DC. The list recognizes experts and advocates outside of government who "shape the laws and policies that govern our nation and ultimately affect the course of history." In its profile of Samp, Washingtonian noted he is the founding director of the Senate's AI Working Group "helping craft the legislative and regulatory proposals that could guide the deployment of artificial intelligence technologies, which are rapidly disrupting business and media" and more recently as a "central player in discussions to establish a national robotics strategy".
Tony is an official advisor to the National Security Commission on Robotics for Advanced Manufacturing Co-Chaired by US Senators Elissa Slotkin (D-MI) and Ted Budd (R-NC).
Tony brings 20 years of experience working with members of Congress, industry, and the executive branch on emerging technologies. Earlier in his career, he served as senior advisor to Senator Martin Heinrich, a member of the Senate Appropriations Committee, the Senate Armed Services Committee, the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence and the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources.
Tony heads DLA Piper's AI policy practice in Washington, DC. He was the founding director of the Senate Artificial Intelligence Caucus and was Senator Heinrich's principal author of US$2.2 billion legislation, the Artificial Intelligence Initiative Act (AI-IA), that was endorsed by 11 major associations and institutions to organize a national strategy for AI and invest in academia, national laboratories, and industry. The core provisions of the legislation were signed into law in January 2021 and remain a landmark for US policy and federal funding of AI. He also advised the 15-member National Security Commission on Artificial Intelligence.
Tony was appointed an Adjunct Senior Fellow at the Center for a New American Security and is currently a Visiting Fellow at George Mason University's Antonin Scalia Law School bipartisan National Security Institute in Washington, DC.
Tony Samp is not a lawyer.