Is your company’s board ‘Trump friendly’? Meta’s appointment of UFC chief Dana White marks a new era of politicized boardrooms

America’s largest companies haven’t tried to camouflage their efforts to win favor with a new Trump administration.

Amazon, OpenAI, Meta, Apple, and others have donated generously to Trump’s overflowing Inaugural Committee fund, and several CEOs have beelined to Mar-a-Lago to dine with the president-elect.

Still, governance experts say Meta may have taken the game to a new level this week when it added Dana White, chief executive of Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC), and one of Trump’s closest friends, to its board of directors. Meta’s move may even represent a questionable new trend, they say: recruiting Trump’s political allies to keep a company aligned with the political party in office.

“I would be surprised if Meta's competitors haven't had similar conversations at the board level about adjusting to potential government scrutiny changes,” said Jason Schloetzer, an associate professor at Georgetown University McDonough School of Business. Such adjustments, he adds, could include tweaking a board’s composition, or changing lobbying or campaign contribution tactics.

But while Schloetzer also believes Meta’s board pick makes sense, others are wary of a future where board picks are politicized.

Charles Elson, founding director of the Weinberg Center for Corporate Governance at the University of Delaware, for instance, says he wouldn’t be surprised to see other companies follow suit with their board picks to “meet the demands of the current political environment.” But he discourages the practice, saying he has never asked a CEO or board member about their political attachments. “Someone's political affiliations should be irrelevant to a board appointment,” he told Fortune.

What exactly did Meta do?

UFC’s White was one of three new directors added to Meta’s expanded board this week, along with John Elkann, executive chairman of Stellantis and Ferrari, and Charlie Songhurst, a noted technology investor and former global corporate strategy leader for Microsoft. However, White’s arrival at the company has caused the biggest stir.

The CEO played a critical role in putting Trump in front of young male voters who are also loyal followers of UFC’s theatrical and violent cage fights. Indeed, few companies are as associated with what’s known as the manosphere, an online community driven by male conservative influencers who subscribe to arcane and often alarming maxims about men’s rights, are usually obsessed with men’s health and fitness, and are thought to have helped Trump win the 2024 election. Trump has made special, much-hyped appearances at UFC fights, while White and Trump have a long history. It was Trump who in 2001 gave the UFC a home at his Trump Taj Mahal casino in Atlantic City, just when White was struggling to build the company. The UFC is now worth an estimated $12 billion.