White House AI Czar Sacks to Step Down, Moves to Advisory Role

WASHINGTON, March 26 (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 co-founded 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)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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