David Sacks Transitions to Advisory Role After Stepping Down as White House AI Chief

David Sacks Transitions to Advisory Role After Stepping Down as White House AI Chief

Synopsis

David Sacks was appointed to his role ‌in December 2024, but under US rules, special government employees are limited to 130 days ​of work ​in a 12-month ⁠period. The cap applies to days worked rather than the overall length of the appointment.
Reuters
White House artificial intelligence and crypto czar David Sacks is stepping down from his role, saying in an interview on Bloomberg Television on Thursday he had reached the end of his time as a special government employee.

Sacks said he is ‌joining President ⁠Donald ⁠Trump's Council of Advisors on Science and Technology, a federal advisory committee composed of industry and academic experts. As co-chair of the body he would be able to make recommendations on a broader range of technology issues beyond AI, he said.

Sacks said earlier this month the ⁠U.S. should "declare ‌victory and get out" of the Iran war, a rare instance of a prominent figure in ⁠the Trump administration calling for an exit from the conflict.

Sacks has been a notable figure in the White House since Trump began his second term. A longtime Silicon Valley entrepreneur and investor, he is a partner at Craft Ventures, the firm he cofounded in 2017.

He was appointed to his role ‌in December 2024, but under U.S. rules, special government employees are limited to 130 days of work in a 12-month ⁠period. The cap applies to days worked rather than the overall length of the appointment.

During his time as AI czar, Sacks presided over a loosening of Biden-era restrictions on AI chip shipments to China.

In his interview with Bloomberg, Sacks said he will continue to help advance Trump's AI policy framework released last week.

(Reporting by Nandita Bose in Washington; Editing by Tom Hogue)