Corporate Donations to Trump’s Inauguration Linked to Dropped Federal Cases
A recent analysis following the release of new data from the Federal Election Commission reveals that the Trump administration has ceased or put on hold federal enforcement actions against at least 17 corporations that contributed to the president’s inaugural committee. This suggests that these companies’ efforts to curry favor with the administration might be succeeding.
The watchdog organization Public Citizen analyzed the FEC data disclosed this Sunday alongside their own Corporate Enforcement Tracker, which lists companies implicated in federal legal issues.
Public Citizen discovered that companies under federal scrutiny or involved in enforcement lawsuits had donated a total of $50 million to President Donald Trump’s second inaugural committee. According to the latest FEC disclosures, Trump’s inauguration fundraising reached a new high of $239 million.
“These corporate contributions to Trump’s inauguration are not merely acts of generosity,” explained Rick Claypool, a researcher at Public Citizen. “They are clear attempts to garner favorable treatment. This could mean halting enforcement actions or potentially securing pardons in cases where guilty pleas were submitted, or even withdrawing from previously agreed settlements.”
Companies like Bank of America, Capital One, Coinbase, DuPont, and JPMorgan, all of which contributed to Trump’s inauguration, saw federal enforcement actions against them dismissed subsequently.
Public Citizen pointed out that Google, which gave $1 million to the inaugural committee, might enjoy benefits from the Trump-led Justice Department’s decision to cancel a segment of a proposed breakup plan that would have forced Google to divest its AI businesses.
Google’s CEO, Sundar Pichai, was among the high-profile business leaders prominently featured at Trump’s January inauguration ceremony.
“They really never miss an opportunity for some good old-fashioned corporate bribery.”
Other donors to the inauguration have also seen favorable outcomes from the Trump administration’s decisions.
Robert Reich, former U.S. Labor Secretary, highlighted late Monday on social media that Trump’s administration might discontinue the IRS’s free Direct File program after Intuit, which donated $1 million to the inauguration, lobbied against it.
“Apple donated $1M. Trump exempted most of Apple’s imports from tariffs,” Reich continued. “Coinbase donated $1M. Trump’s SEC dropped a major lawsuit against them. See how this works?”
The apparent quid-pro-quo nature of these donations and subsequent governmental favors has been glaringly obvious in the early months of Trump’s second term, drawing criticism and accusations of blatant corruption, with the presidency seemingly being up for sale.
CBS News reported that many corporate entities sponsored the White House’s Easter Egg Roll this Monday, moving away from the traditional sponsorship by the American Egg Board.
Companies like Amazon, Google’s YouTube, and Facebook’s parent company Meta were sponsors of various activities at the event, CBS noted.
“Nothing says Happy Easter in Trump 2.0 like having corporate sponsors at the White House Egg Roll,” commented Public Citizen. “They really never miss an opportunity for some good old-fashioned corporate bribery.”
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An economic reporter, Dax Everly breaks down financial trends and their impact on Americans’ daily lives.