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Meta Names Former Trump Adviser As President, Drawing Praise From White House

MarketDash Editorial Team
15 hours ago
Mark Zuckerberg continues building bridges with the Trump administration, hiring Dina Powell McCormick as Meta's president and vice chairman. The appointment brings a seasoned government and finance veteran into a key role overseeing the company's massive AI infrastructure investments.

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Meta Platforms (META) is making moves that have less to do with your Facebook feed and more to do with Washington power circles. The social media giant announced Monday that it's bringing Dina Powell McCormick on board as president and vice chairman, a hire that immediately caught President Donald Trump's attention.

The timing is interesting. Meta is pivoting hard toward artificial intelligence, pouring billions into infrastructure and recently partnering with nuclear energy companies to power that growth. This isn't your traditional social media play anymore.

A Familiar Face Returns

McCormick isn't exactly new to Meta. She served on the company's board from April through December 2025 before stepping down without public explanation. Now she's back in a significantly more powerful role.

"Dina served as an invaluable member of Meta's board of directors, and she's been deeply engaged as we've accelerated our pursuit of frontier AI and personal superintelligence," Meta said in announcing the appointment.

Her new responsibilities aren't small. McCormick will join Meta's management team to help shape strategy and execution, with particular focus on the company's massive infrastructure investments. "She will partner with the compute and infrastructure teams to ensure our multi-billion-dollar investments execute against our goals," the company explained.

The Resume That Matters

McCormick brings serious credentials to the role. She served as Deputy National Security Advisor during Trump's first term and held senior positions under President George W. Bush as a White House Advisor and Assistant Secretary of State. Add to that over 25 years in finance, national security, and economic development, including 16 years at Goldman Sachs (GS) in various senior leadership roles.

"Dina's experience at the highest levels of global finance, combined with her deep relationships around the world, makes her uniquely suited to help Meta manage this next phase of growth as the company's president and vice chairman," Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg said.

Trump didn't wait long to weigh in. "Congratulations to Dina Powell McCormick, who has just been named the new president of Meta. A great choice by Mark Z!!! She is a fantastic, and very talented, person, who served the Trump Administration with strength and distinction," he posted on social media.

There's another political angle here: McCormick is married to Sen. David McCormick (R-Pa.), the former CEO of Bridgewater Associates who also served under President Bush and maintains close ties to Trump.

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The Zuckerberg Pivot

This hire makes a lot more sense when you look at how dramatically Zuckerberg's relationship with Trump has evolved. Before the 2024 election, Trump was literally threatening to jail Zuckerberg if he won. That obviously didn't happen, and it seems Zuckerberg took the threat as motivation to rebuild the relationship.

After previously banning Trump from Instagram and Facebook, Meta welcomed him back to the platforms. Then came a series of moves widely seen as attempts to curry favor with the administration: Zuckerberg announced changes to Meta's third-party fact-checking system and hiring processes, donated to Trump's inauguration fund, and attended Trump's return to the White House in January 2025.

The McCormick appointment is the latest chapter in this reconciliation story. Meta has also added UFC CEO Dana White, another Trump ally, to its board of directors. The company now has multiple people with strong Trump connections in both management and board positions.

Why It Matters

Having friends in high places isn't just good politics; it's good business. A strong relationship with the Trump administration could help Meta secure favorable government contracts and smooth the path for any future acquisitions that need regulatory approval. When you're making multi-billion-dollar infrastructure bets on AI development, having Washington on your side doesn't hurt.

Whether you see this as savvy corporate strategy or something more cynical probably depends on your view of how tech and politics should intersect. Either way, Zuckerberg is clearly betting that building bridges with Trump is worth the effort, and McCormick's appointment suggests he's willing to put real organizational power behind that strategy.

Meta Names Former Trump Adviser As President, Drawing Praise From White House

MarketDash Editorial Team
15 hours ago
Mark Zuckerberg continues building bridges with the Trump administration, hiring Dina Powell McCormick as Meta's president and vice chairman. The appointment brings a seasoned government and finance veteran into a key role overseeing the company's massive AI infrastructure investments.

Get Goldman Sachs Group Alerts

Weekly insights + SMS alerts

Meta Platforms (META) is making moves that have less to do with your Facebook feed and more to do with Washington power circles. The social media giant announced Monday that it's bringing Dina Powell McCormick on board as president and vice chairman, a hire that immediately caught President Donald Trump's attention.

The timing is interesting. Meta is pivoting hard toward artificial intelligence, pouring billions into infrastructure and recently partnering with nuclear energy companies to power that growth. This isn't your traditional social media play anymore.

A Familiar Face Returns

McCormick isn't exactly new to Meta. She served on the company's board from April through December 2025 before stepping down without public explanation. Now she's back in a significantly more powerful role.

"Dina served as an invaluable member of Meta's board of directors, and she's been deeply engaged as we've accelerated our pursuit of frontier AI and personal superintelligence," Meta said in announcing the appointment.

Her new responsibilities aren't small. McCormick will join Meta's management team to help shape strategy and execution, with particular focus on the company's massive infrastructure investments. "She will partner with the compute and infrastructure teams to ensure our multi-billion-dollar investments execute against our goals," the company explained.

The Resume That Matters

McCormick brings serious credentials to the role. She served as Deputy National Security Advisor during Trump's first term and held senior positions under President George W. Bush as a White House Advisor and Assistant Secretary of State. Add to that over 25 years in finance, national security, and economic development, including 16 years at Goldman Sachs (GS) in various senior leadership roles.

"Dina's experience at the highest levels of global finance, combined with her deep relationships around the world, makes her uniquely suited to help Meta manage this next phase of growth as the company's president and vice chairman," Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg said.

Trump didn't wait long to weigh in. "Congratulations to Dina Powell McCormick, who has just been named the new president of Meta. A great choice by Mark Z!!! She is a fantastic, and very talented, person, who served the Trump Administration with strength and distinction," he posted on social media.

There's another political angle here: McCormick is married to Sen. David McCormick (R-Pa.), the former CEO of Bridgewater Associates who also served under President Bush and maintains close ties to Trump.

Get Goldman Sachs Group Alerts

Weekly insights + SMS (optional)

The Zuckerberg Pivot

This hire makes a lot more sense when you look at how dramatically Zuckerberg's relationship with Trump has evolved. Before the 2024 election, Trump was literally threatening to jail Zuckerberg if he won. That obviously didn't happen, and it seems Zuckerberg took the threat as motivation to rebuild the relationship.

After previously banning Trump from Instagram and Facebook, Meta welcomed him back to the platforms. Then came a series of moves widely seen as attempts to curry favor with the administration: Zuckerberg announced changes to Meta's third-party fact-checking system and hiring processes, donated to Trump's inauguration fund, and attended Trump's return to the White House in January 2025.

The McCormick appointment is the latest chapter in this reconciliation story. Meta has also added UFC CEO Dana White, another Trump ally, to its board of directors. The company now has multiple people with strong Trump connections in both management and board positions.

Why It Matters

Having friends in high places isn't just good politics; it's good business. A strong relationship with the Trump administration could help Meta secure favorable government contracts and smooth the path for any future acquisitions that need regulatory approval. When you're making multi-billion-dollar infrastructure bets on AI development, having Washington on your side doesn't hurt.

Whether you see this as savvy corporate strategy or something more cynical probably depends on your view of how tech and politics should intersect. Either way, Zuckerberg is clearly betting that building bridges with Trump is worth the effort, and McCormick's appointment suggests he's willing to put real organizational power behind that strategy.