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Sundar Pichai, Satya Nadella among 5 Indian-origin CEOs at Trump’s dinner with tech titans

| @indiablooms | Sep 05, 2025, at 09:30 pm

Washington, DC: U.S. President Donald Trump on Thursday hosted some of the world’s most powerful technology leaders for an exclusive dinner at the White House, with the conspicuous absence of Tesla and SpaceX chief Elon Musk underscoring the widening rift between the two.

While the guest list included giants like Bill Gates, Tim Cook, Mark Zuckerberg, and Sergey Brin, what stood out was the strong presence of five Indian-origin executives—Google’s Sundar Pichai, Microsoft’s Satya Nadella, IBM’s Arvind Krishna, Micron Technology’s Sanjay Mehrotra, and TIBCO Software’s Vivek Ranadivé.

Their inclusion highlights the growing clout of Indian Americans in shaping global technology and artificial intelligence.

Indian-origin leaders at the forefront

From pioneering cloud computing to steering AI and semiconductor breakthroughs, the five Indian-origin leaders represent companies critical to the U.S. technology landscape.

Their prominence comes even as Trump has tightened immigration policies, including stricter scrutiny of H-1B visas—widely used by Indian tech professionals—while pressing corporations to “hire American” and reduce reliance on foreign talent.

Several analysts noted the irony. The very executives shaping America’s AI future are themselves products of the Indian diaspora, at a time when the Trump administration’s immigration agenda has made pathways for skilled workers more restrictive.

Musk missing, others present

Besides Pichai, Nadella, Krishna, Mehrotra, and Ranadivé, the dinner drew OpenAI’s Sam Altman and Greg Brockman, Oracle’s Safra Catz, Blue Origin’s David Limp, and Scale AI founder Alexandr Wang. Musk, once close to Trump, was left out following a string of clashes earlier this year.

Melania’s AI task force

The dinner followed the first meeting of the Artificial Intelligence Education Task Force, led by First Lady Melania Trump.

“The robots are here. Our future is no longer science fiction,” she said, emphasising the need for AI education to prepare young Americans for a rapidly changing workforce.

White House officials described the dinner—nicknamed the “Rose Garden Club”—as the beginning of a series of high-level engagements between Trump and technology leaders.

Indian-origin CEOs in the spotlight

The timing of the dinner is notable. Even as Trump pushes steep tariffs on Indian exports and doubles down on curbing work visas, Indian-origin executives continue to dominate the global tech industry.

Their presence at the White House showcased not only their influence in AI, semiconductors, and cloud computing, but also the growing role of the Indian diaspora in America’s technology future.

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