Senator Elizabeth Warren isn't buying the Trump administration's explanation for why Nvidia Corp. (NVDA) suddenly got permission to sell advanced AI chips to China. On Monday, the Massachusetts Democrat suggested the approval had less to do with careful policy analysis and more to do with CEO Jensen Huang's checkbook and proximity to power.
Money Talks, According To Warren
Warren laid out her theory on X: "After NVIDIA's CEO paid for a special dinner and his company donated to Donald Trump's gold-plated ballroom, he got his wish to sell advanced AI chips to China. Money talks in the Trump Administration."
The timeline does raise eyebrows. Huang donated to fund construction of a $300 million White House ballroom project and attended a $1 million-per-person dinner at Mar-a-Lago earlier this year. Then the Trump administration greenlit exports of Nvidia's H200 chips to approved Chinese customers. Nvidia wasn't listed among official White House donors, and the company didn't immediately respond to requests for comment.
What Trump Actually Approved
Earlier this month, Trump confirmed that Nvidia could ship H200 chips to approved customers in China and other countries, though with conditions designed to protect national security. He added that Chinese President Xi Jinping responded "positively" to the arrangement.
The approval doesn't extend to everything in Nvidia's arsenal. The company's most advanced Blackwell chips and next-generation Rubin platform remain off-limits to Chinese buyers. Trump emphasized those will stay available only to American customers.
Why Former Leaders Are Sounding Alarms
The decision has sparked concern beyond Capitol Hill. Former UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak warned in The Times that the H200 isn't just incrementally better than what China had before. It's significantly more powerful than chips Chinese firms could previously access and stronger than anything Chinese companies are likely to produce soon.
Sunak's argument: This materially increases the risk that China catches up to, or even overtakes, Western nations in artificial intelligence development. That's not a minor policy tweak. It's a potential shift in the global balance of technological power.
The Optics Problem
The controversy isn't really about whether Nvidia makes good chips or whether some exports might be manageable under the right conditions. It's about whether high-dollar access to Trump translates into favorable policy outcomes.
Nvidia hit a $5 trillion market value in October, making it the first company to reach that milestone. The chip giant has invested heavily in U.S. operations since Trump's return to office and sits in the 97th percentile for growth among tracked stocks, outperforming rivals like AMD and Intel.
Whether that success bought influence or just created opportunities for business-friendly policy depends on who you ask. But Warren's making sure everyone's asking the question.




