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BackSriram Krishnan to Leave Trump Administration by End of June
Sriram Krishnan to Leave Trump Administration by End of June
Politics
TechCrunch6/6/2026Politics2 min readUnited States

Sriram Krishnan to Leave Trump Administration by End of June

Quick Look

Sriram Krishnan, Senior Policy Advisor on AI at the White House, to leave Trump administration by June end, citing honor to serve under President Trump and highlighting AI Action Plan achievements.

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Why It Matters

Sriram Krishnan, a former tech executive and VC, served as a senior policy advisor on AI in the Trump administration, contributing to its AI Action Plan.

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Former tech executive and VC Sriram Krishnan is leaving the Trump administration at the end of June. “It is hard to express how big a privilege it has been to serve the American people and how grateful I am to have had the opportunity to do so,” Krishnan said in a post on X. “First and foremost, it has been an honor to serve under President [Donald Trump]. Without his leadership, we would not be leading in the AI race.” Krishnan, who’s been serving as a senior policy advisor on artificial intelligence at the White House, was one of a number of tech industry figures to take roles in the second Trump administration. Krishnan has led product teams at Microsoft, Twitter, Yahoo, Facebook, and Snap, and he was most recently a partner at Andreessen Horowitz, a firm whose founders threw their support behind Trump during the 2024 election. In his post, Krishnan highlighted some “key public accomplishments,” starting with the administration’s AI Action Plan, which prioritized data center construction over regulation and safety. Since then, Trump has signed several executive orders around AI, including one that seeks to challenge state-level AI regulations and another focused on oversight that was delayed and narrowed after industry pushback. Trump has also endorsed the idea that the government could take an equity stake in major AI companies. Krishnan noted that the person he “worked [most] closely with over the last 18 months” was David Sacks, the investor and podcaster who stepped down as AI and crypto czar earlier this year and became co-chair of the President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology. “[Sacks’] continuing advocacy for America winning on AI has been and continues to be crucial,” Krishnan said. Next, Krishnan said he will be “building institutions” that tackle big challenges for “America and its allies.” According to The Washington Post, he’s planning to start an outside institution that will still give him a role in influencing Trump’s AI policy. “Whether it is energy, data centers or a clear path for Americans to experience the benefits of AI, there are many tough issues we all need to navigate together,” Krishnan said.

What to Watch

AI outlook — possibilities, not facts

  • Krishnan's new institution will influence Trump's AI policy from outside the administration.

    Likely · Within months

Open Questions

  • What will be the exact focus of Krishnan's new institution?
  • How will Krishnan's departure affect the administration's AI policy?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by TechCrunch.

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