Macron’s Delhi Address: The Most Important AI Speech a European Leader Has Given

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There have been many speeches about AI governance. There have been regulatory frameworks, white papers, international declarations and panel discussions without number. What Emmanuel Macron delivered at the AI Impact Summit in Delhi was something different: a speech that combined political authority, moral clarity and policy specifics into a coherent argument for a particular vision of AI’s future. It may be the most consequential address on this subject that a European leader has delivered.
The speech had three elements that set it apart. First, Macron centred it on children — specifically on Unicef-Interpol research showing that 1.2 million children in 11 countries had been victimised by AI deepfakes in a single year. This grounded an abstract regulatory debate in human reality, making the stakes visible and the urgency undeniable. Second, he connected child safety directly to the regulatory debate, arguing that the harm documented by the research is a consequence of regulatory failure rather than an unfortunate side effect of beneficial technology. Third, he proposed concrete action: domestic legislation, international coordination through the G7, enforceable standards rather than voluntary commitments.
His defence of European regulation was equally effective. Against the Trump administration’s characterisation of the EU’s AI Act as hostile to innovation, Macron offered evidence: Europe innovates, invests and protects its people, and the three activities are not mutually exclusive. He described the critics as misinformed rather than malicious — a distinction that left the door open for dialogue while refusing to concede the argument. His confidence was the confidence of someone who believes the evidence is on his side, and on this point, it largely is.
The response from other leaders was notable. António Guterres backed Macron’s broader direction, warning against AI monopolies and calling for inclusive global governance. Narendra Modi aligned on child safety, calling for AI that is child-safe and family-guided. Sam Altman endorsed the idea of an international oversight body — a concession from within the industry that the case for external accountability is real. The political context Macron’s speech created was one in which governance is not optional but necessary.
What makes the speech potentially significant beyond the summit is its timing. France holds the G7 presidency. The evidence of AI harm to children is mounting. The political coalition for governance is growing. And Macron has demonstrated, in Delhi, that he is prepared to use his platform aggressively in service of a clear position. That combination of circumstance and political will does not come together often. When it does, it tends to produce change.

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