The Roosevelt Room meeting began as a standard policy briefing but shifted dramatically when Trump unveiled plans from Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg for a massive AI data center in Louisiana. Spanning 2,250 acres—larger than most of Manhattan—the project symbolized America’s bet on artificial intelligence, with talk of four such facilities nationwide and investments cited as high as $50 billion. The scale, requiring its own power plants, underscored both the promise of U.S. tech leadership and the immense resources needed to sustain it.
Cabinet discussions framed the project as part of a broader struggle with China over technological supremacy. While the U.S. leads in software innovation, members warned that China’s dominance in energy infrastructure could tilt the balance. Trump coupled the AI announcement with pledges to boost domestic manufacturing through tariffs and a push to criminalize flag burning—policies blending economic nationalism with symbolic politics. The meeting made clear that America’s global influence now hinges on computational power, energy capacity, and the uneasy partnership between private innovation and government strategy.