David Sacks has wrapped up his 130-day role as Donald Trump’s special government employee focused on AI and crypto and is transitioning to co-chair the President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology (PCAST) alongside senior White House technology adviser Michael Kratsios. The change shifts Sacks away from a direct White House policy role and into a high-profile advisory position that covers a broader swath of technology topics.
From AI czar to PCAST co-chair: what changed
As AI czar, Sacks had a direct line to the president and a hand in shaping policy. In his new role co-chairing PCAST, he will lead an advisory body that studies issues, produces reports, and submits recommendations to the administration — but does not itself make policy. Sacks told Bloomberg that co-chairing PCAST will allow him to make recommendations on ‘not just AI but an expanded range of technology topics.’ 🤝
Who is on this PCAST and why it matters
This PCAST iteration includes an unusually large number of tech industry leaders, which Sacks described as ‘the most star power of any group like this’ ever assembled. The initial members include executives and founders such as:
- Jensen Huang, Nvidia
- Mark Zuckerberg, Meta
- Larry Ellison, Oracle
- Sergey Brin, Google co-founder
- Marc Andreessen
- Lisa Su, AMD
- Michael Dell
That lineup signals a PCAST focused on industry-driven perspectives for technologies like AI, advanced semiconductors, quantum computing, and nuclear power.
Policy priorities and near-term focus
Sacks said the council will tackle AI, semiconductors, quantum computing, and nuclear energy, with near-term attention on advancing the administration’s recently released national AI framework. He framed the framework as an effort to replace a confusing patchwork of state-level rules that he said is making compliance difficult for U.S. innovators.
Why the timing raised eyebrows
The transition comes amid broader attention to Sacks following remarks he made earlier this month on the ‘All In’ podcast. On the show, he urged the administration to find an exit from the U.S.-backed conflict with Iran, outlining possible escalation scenarios and advocating for a way out. The White House indicated Sacks had not briefed the president on those comments, and Sacks clarified to Bloomberg that his podcast remarks represented his personal view and that he is not part of the administration’s foreign policy or national security teams.
Ethics and industry ties
Sacks also faced scrutiny over ethics waivers that allowed him to retain financial stakes in AI and crypto companies while serving in a federal role, a setup reported by TechCrunch and criticized by some ethics experts and lawmakers. Now that he returns to a less direct policy-making role, those relationships and how they influence advisory recommendations remain points of public interest.
What PCAST has achieved historically
PCAST has a long history as an advisory body, with effectiveness varying by administration. For example:
- President Obama’s PCAST produced numerous reports, with a few leading to concrete policy changes.
- President Trump’s first-term council moved slowly and produced fewer visible outcomes.
- President Biden’s council skewed academic and produced a modest number of reports.
The current council, populated with corporate tech leaders, looks different from past versions and could produce recommendations that emphasize industry priorities and near-term commercial feasibility.
So what does this mean for AI and tech policy?
In practice, Sacks’ move means:
- Less direct policy power: He will no longer have the same proximity to the president that his AI czar role provided.
- Broader advisory remit: PCAST allows him to shape thinking across multiple technologies, not just AI.
- Industry-aligned recommendations: With many corporate leaders on the council, expect reports that favor innovation-friendly, centralized frameworks over a patchwork of state rules.
Bottom line
David Sacks is transitioning from a hands-on White House role to a powerful advisory seat. While PCAST cannot directly make law, its recommendations — backed by a who’s who of tech executives — could shape the administration’s approach to AI, chips, quantum computing, and more. For observers, the key questions are how industry perspectives will influence policy recommendations and whether PCAST’s advice will translate into concrete federal action. 🔍
