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Mark Zuckerberg’s Meta donates $1m to Trump pool


Mark Zuckerberg’s Meta donates $1m to Trump pool

Reuters Mark Zuckerberg shown on stage at Meta Connect 2024Reuters

Meta, the parent corporation of Facebook and Instagram, has donated $1m (£786,000) to an inauguration pool for President-elect Donald Trump.

The tech giant’s boss, Mark Zuckerberg, dined with Trump at his Mar-a-Lago resort in November, having sought to repair his and his firm’s connection with Trump following the election.

Trump has previously been highly critical of Mr Zuckerberg and Facebook – calling the platform “anti-Trump” in 2017.

Meta is not believed to have made similar donations to President Joe Biden’s inaugural pool in 2020 or to Trump’s previous inaugural pool in 2016.

The corporation confirmed its million-dollar donation to the inaugural pool to several outlets on Wednesday.

Inauguration funds are used to pay for events and activities when a recent president takes office – some consider them an attempt to curry favour with a recent administration.

The donation was confirmed by CBS, the BBC’s US media associate, on Wednesday, and was first reported by the Wall Street Journal.

The BBC has approached Meta for comment.

Trump will be sworn in as the 47th US president on 20 January.

Trump & Mark Zuckerberg’s history

Relations between Trump and Mr Zuckerberg have historically been far less cordial.

They particularly soured when Facebook and Instagram suspended the former president’s accounts in 2021, after they said he praised those engaged in violence at the Capitol on 6 January.

Since then, Trump has waged a war of words against Meta – calling Facebook an “foe of the people” in March.

He said a law that would view TikTok banned in the US unless sold off by its parent corporation ByteDance would unfairly advantage Facebook.

In August, Mr Zuckerberg told Republican lawmakers in a note that he regretted bowing to pressure from the Biden administration to “censor” some Facebook and Instagram content during the coronavirus pandemic.

Trump wrote in a book published in September that Mr Zuckerberg would “spend the rest of his life in prison” if he tried to intervene in the 2024 election.

But the president-elect appears to have since softened his position.

He told a podcast in October it was “enjoyable” Mr Zuckerberg was “staying out of the election”, and thanked him for a personal phone call after he faced an assassination attempt.

Still, Mr Zuckerberg remains far less close to Trump than fellow tech titan Elon Musk.

The Tesla and X owner has been dubbed Trump’s “First Buddy” because of his extensive donations to his election campaign.

That has led to Mr Musk being placed in expense of a recent Department of Government Efficiency (Doge).

There has been no such rapprochement between Mr Musk and Mr Zuckerberg – although the cage fight between them that was once mooted now appears to be off.



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