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    Home » A DOGE AI Tool Called SweetREX Is Coming to Slash US Government Regulation
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    A DOGE AI Tool Called SweetREX Is Coming to Slash US Government Regulation

    News RoomBy News RoomAugust 15, 20253 Mins Read
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    Efforts to gut regulation across the US government using AI are well underway.

    On Wednesday, the Office of the Chief Information Officer at the Office of Management and Budget hosted a video call to discuss an AI tool being used to cut federal regulations, which the office called SweetREX Deregulation AI. The tool, which is still being developed, is built to identify sections of regulations that aren’t required by statute, then expedite the process for adopting updated regulations.

    The development and rollout of what is being formally called the SweetREX Deregulation AI Plan Builder, or SweetREX DAIP, is meant to help achieve the goals laid out in President Donald Trump’s “Unleashing Prosperity Through Deregulation” executive order, which aims to “promote prudent financial management and alleviate unnecessary regulatory burdens.” Industrial-scale deregulation is a core aim laid out in Project 2025, the document that has served as a playbook for the second Trump administration. The so-called Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) has also estimated that “50 percent of all federal regulations can be eliminated,” according to a July 1, 2025, PowerPoint presentation obtained by The Washington Post.

    To this end, SweetREX was developed by associates of DOGE operating out of the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). The plan is to roll it out to other US agencies. Members of the call included staffers from across the government, including the Environmental Protection Agency, the Department of State, and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, among others.

    Christopher Sweet, a DOGE affiliate who was initially introduced to colleagues as a “special assistant” and who was until recently a third-year student at the University of Chicago, co-led the call and was identified as the primary developer of SweetREX (thus, its name). He told colleagues that tools from Anthropic and OpenAI will be increasingly utilized by federal workers and that “a lot of the productivity boosts will come from the tools that are built around these platforms.” Sweet said that for SweetREX, they are “primarily using the Google family of models, so primarily Gemini.”

    Neither Sweet nor OMB immediately responded to WIRED’s request for comment. HUD’s press office responded only to say the request was “under review.” Google did not yet respond to a request for comment.

    Previously, WIRED reported on the output of an AI tool for deregulation at HUD. A spreadsheet detailed how many words could be eliminated from individual regulations and gave a percentage figure indicating how noncompliant the regulations were; how that percentage was calculated was unclear. At the time, Sweet did not respond to a request for comment, and a HUD spokesperson said the agency does not comment on individual personnel.

    Leading Wednesday’s call alongside Sweet was Scott Langmack, a DOGE-affiliated senior adviser at HUD and, according to his LinkedIn profile, the COO of technology company Kukun. (WIRED previously reported that he had application-level access to critical HUD systems; Kukun is a proptech firm that is, according to its website, “on a long-term mission to aggregate the hardest to find data.”) While Sweet led the development side of SweetREX, Langmack said he was taking point on demoing the tool for different agencies and pitching them on its benefits. He claimed, for example, that the tool is capable of reducing the time spent reviewing and proposing edited regulations from months to just a few hours or days.

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