Former Trump Adviser Dina Powell McCormick Appointed Meta President and Vice Chairman

Meta Platforms on Monday named former Trump administration official Dina Powell McCormick as its president and vice chairman, a move widely seen as strengthening the company’s lobbying and political ties in Washington.

U.S. President Donald Trump congratulated Powell McCormick shortly after the announcement in a post on Truth Social, calling her “fantastic” and praising her service in his administration with “strength and distinction.”

Her appointment comes amid a broader strategic realignment at Meta that has brought the company closer to Trump and Republican leadership. Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg has been seeking political backing for Meta’s expanding investments in frontier artificial intelligence and so-called personal superintelligence, including plans to build massive data centers and secure long-term energy capacity. Ahead of Trump’s second inauguration, Zuckerberg visited him at his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida.

Over the past year, Meta has taken several steps that have appealed to Trump, including scrapping its U.S. fact-checking program, promoting Republican executive Joel Kaplan to chief global affairs officer, ending diversity programs, and hiring former Trump trade adviser C.J. Mahoney to lead its legal team. Meta declined to say whether Powell McCormick’s appointment was intended to curry favor with Trump.

Dina Powell McCormick Joins Meta as President and Vice Chairman

According to the company, Powell McCormick will focus on expanding Meta’s data center footprint, building new strategic capital partnerships, and increasing the firm’s long-term investment capacity—areas critical to its AI ambitions. Meta has committed up to $72 billion in capital spending for 2025 as it works to regain momentum in Silicon Valley’s AI race after a muted reception to its Llama 4 model.

Powell McCormick brings extensive experience in both finance and government. She spent 16 years in senior leadership roles at Goldman Sachs, served as deputy national security adviser during Trump’s first term, and previously held a senior White House advisory role under former President George W. Bush. She is married to David McCormick, a Republican senator from Pennsylvania who chairs a Senate subcommittee overseeing energy policy—an area relevant to Meta’s data center expansion.

A spokesperson for Senator McCormick said he will continue to comply with all Senate ethics rules. However, critics raised concerns about potential conflicts of interest. Sacha Haworth, executive director of the Tech Oversight Project, said the senator should recuse himself from any votes or committee actions involving Meta’s business.

Powell McCormick’s new role echoes the influence once wielded by former Chief Operating Officer Sheryl Sandberg, who used deep ties to Washington and the Democratic Party to help Meta navigate regulatory scrutiny. Notably, Powell McCormick had resigned from Meta’s board in December, just eight months after joining, before being elevated to her new executive position.