Meta Names Dina Powell McCormick President and Vice Chairman

META
January 12, 2026

Meta Platforms has named former Trump administration adviser Dina Powell McCormick as its first president and vice chairman, a move that places a seasoned dealmaker at the helm of the company’s next growth phase. The appointment, announced on January 12, 2026, will see McCormick report directly to CEO Mark Zuckerberg and oversee the company’s strategic direction, AI infrastructure buildout, and capital allocation.

McCormick brings 16 years of experience as a partner on Goldman Sachs’ Management Committee and a former Deputy National Security Advisor to President Donald Trump. She resigned from Meta’s board of directors in December 2025 after joining in April 2025, but her deep ties to global finance and government relations are expected to strengthen Meta’s ability to secure strategic capital partnerships and navigate regulatory scrutiny.

Meta’s AI strategy hinges on a $600 billion investment in data centers and infrastructure through 2028, including gigawatt‑scale facilities and the deployment of over a million GPUs. McCormick’s role will be to steer this massive spend, secure financing, and ensure that the company’s AI ambitions are matched by robust, sustainable infrastructure and energy solutions, such as the company’s exploration of nuclear power to support its data centers.

Zuckerberg said, “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.” The appointment signals Meta’s intent to accelerate AI development while competing with rivals such as TikTok, Apple, and Alphabet, and to strengthen its position in a regulatory environment that is increasingly focused on data privacy and antitrust concerns.

The addition of a former Trump official to Meta’s top leadership underscores the company’s commitment to building strategic partnerships worldwide and to maintaining a strong presence in the evolving AI landscape. It also reflects Meta’s broader strategy of leveraging high‑profile talent to navigate complex geopolitical and regulatory challenges while pursuing aggressive growth in AI and infrastructure.

The appointment is a material leadership change that could influence Meta’s capital allocation, regulatory strategy, and global expansion plans, marking a significant shift in the company’s executive structure and strategic priorities.

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