Musk, Barra and Ford Join Trump in Lavish White House Dinner for Saudi Crown Prince
High-profile tech and auto executives attend East Room gala hosted by President Donald Trump and Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman amid deepening U.S.–Saudi ties
A star-studded black-tie dinner held at the White House on November 18 brought together President Donald Trump, Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and a curiously broad coalition of top-tier business executives, signalling the renewed depths of U.S.–Saudi engagement.
Among the guests were Elon Musk, Tesla and SpaceX chief executive, who attended just months after a very public falling out with the president; his presence marked a conspicuous thaw in relations.
Also in attendance were Mary Barra, chief executive of General Motors, and Bill Ford, executive chairman of Ford Motor Company, reflecting the broad spectrum of American corporate interests now aligned with the moment.
The gala capped a day of formalities that featured a bilateral Oval Office meeting between Trump and the Saudi crown prince, a signing ceremony for multiple economic and defence agreements, and a U.S.–Saudi investment forum set to span hundreds of billions of dollars.
The convergence of defence, finance, automotive and technology leadership underscored the administration’s intent to re-centre Riyadh at the heart of U.S. strategic and commercial policy in the Middle East.
While Musk’s attendance drew the most attention, especially given his earlier clash with the White House, both GM’s Barra and Ford’s Bill Ford signalled Detroit’s alignment with the broader industrial and energy-transition aspects of the U.S.–Saudi agenda.
For Saudi Arabia, the guest list reinforced its ambition to diversify and deepen its relationships with major U.S. industries beyond oil and arms.
For the Trump administration, the event demonstrated an eagerness to mobilise private-sector heft behind geopolitical strategy.
Critics raised concerns over the optics of hosting a figure who U.S. intelligence held accountable for the 2018 killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi—Mohammed bin Salman—at a lavish state-adjacent event.
Nonetheless, participants framed the occasion as business-first: Musk is reported to have announced a new multi-hundred-megawatt data-centre project in Saudi Arabia the following day, aligning his ambitious AI play with Riyadh’s own technology-investment drive.
Executives from Nvidia, Apple, IBM, Boeing and major financial institutions also made appearances, emphasising the dinner’s function as a nexus of diplomacy, investment and industry.
Attendees emphasised the message that U.S.–Saudi ties are entering a new phase of co-investment and tech-industrial convergence under Trump’s leadership.
With Musk, Barra and Bill Ford among the key figures present, the event showcased how corporate power is now being marshalled alongside statecraft in Washington’s foreign-policy playbook.