The quote that will define Emmanuel Macron’s appearance at the AI Impact Summit in Delhi is not the most elaborate thing he said. It is the simplest: “Safe spaces win in the long run.” Addressed at critics of European AI regulation, it was also a statement of political philosophy — an argument that the goal of governance is not to constrain ambition but to give it a foundation of trust and accountability. Applied to child safety, it is the most important thing any leader at the summit said.
Macron’s context for that statement was the documented harm being done to children by unregulated AI. Research by Unicef and Interpol found that over 1.2 million children in 11 countries had been victimised by AI-generated explicit deepfakes in a single year. One in 25 children in some nations. The Grok chatbot had been used to produce tens of thousands of sexualised images of children. These incidents are not failures of technology — they are failures of governance, and Macron’s message is that governance is what democratic governments are for.
France’s domestic record on this issue is already meaningful. Legislation to ban social media for children under 15 is under development — a controversial but coherent response to evidence that these platforms cause measurable harm to young people. Through the G7 presidency, Macron is pushing to make this kind of commitment exportable, building international standards that would require platforms and AI developers to take legal responsibility for child safety outcomes rather than aspiring toward them.
The Trump administration’s counter-argument — that regulation stifles innovation and that entrepreneurs need freedom to build — was delivered at the same summit. Macron’s response was that this framing presents a false choice. You can build and protect. You can innovate and govern. Europe does both, and its track record of investment and development demonstrates that the regulatory burden has not been crippling. What has been crippling, he implied, is the absence of standards for the most vulnerable users.
Guterres, Modi and cautiously even Sam Altman all gave Macron political support from different directions. The safe spaces argument — applied to child safety, to AI governance, to the internet as a whole — resonated across national and institutional divides. Whether the summit produces enforceable outcomes depends on what happens in the months ahead. But in Delhi, Macron’s battle cry landed. The question now is whether anyone answers it.