Funded Seditionists Since Jan. 6, Reports Reveal
A pair of watchdog groups on Monday called out companies and trade groups that continued to financially support the 147 congressional Republicans who voted last year to overturn the 2020 presidential election results even after the January 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol.
The
government watchdog group Accountable.US released an interactive report
entitled In Bad Company,
which focuses on 20 Fortune 500 companies and 10 industry groups that have
contributed over $3.3 million to the eight senators and 139 representatives
collectively dubbed the "Sedition Caucus" since a right-wing mob
stormed the Capitol last year.
Companies
profiled by Accountable.US range from fossil fuel and pharmaceutical giants
such as Chevron, ExxonMobil, Merck, and Pfizer, to the shipping companies FedEx
and UPS, to six major military contractors: Boeing, General Dynamics, L3Harris
Technologies, Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, and Raytheon Technologies.
"Major corporations were quick to condemn the insurrection and tout their support for democracy—and almost as quickly, many ditched those purported values by cutting big checks to the very politicians that helped instigate the failed coup attempt," said Accountable.US president Kyle Herrig.
Herrig
argued that corporations continuing to donate to lawmakers "who tried to
overthrow the will of the people makes clear that these companies were never
committed to standing up for democracy in the first place."
Some
members of the Sedition Caucus still cling to former President Donald Trump's
"Big Lie" that the 2020 election involved
widespread voter fraud and was stolen from him—a baseless claim that led to the
Capitol attack and, ultimately, Trump's historic second impeachment.
Meanwhile,
American voters, progressive lawmakers, and experts within and beyond the
United States continue to sound the alarm about the state of the
"backsliding" U.S. democracy.
"Even
as democracy continues to be in the crosshairs of powerful purveyors of the Big
Lie," Herrig said Monday, "these CEOs would rather amass political
influence than stand up for their customers, shareholders, and employees."
The
group Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW) also released a new report—authored by Angela
Li and Areeba Shah—detailing how corporate donors have "broken promises
and funded seditionists" in the aftermath of the Capitol attack.
"Since
the insurrection, 717 corporations and industry groups have donated over $18
million to 143 of the 147 members of Congress who objected to the results of
the 2020 presidential election, as well as the National Republican Senatorial
Committee and the National Republican Congressional Committee," according
to CREW.
Li
and Shah found that despite pledging to stop or halt donations to the Sedition
Caucus, reviewed companies "have contributed a total of $4,785,000 to
insurrectionist political groups, including $2,381,250 directly" to
lawmakers' campaigns and political action committees (PACs).
"Boeing
($346,500), Koch Industries ($308,000), American Crystal Sugar ($285,000),
General Dynamics ($233,500), and Valero Energy ($207,500) are the top corporate
donors to those who objected to the election and their party committees,"
the report says.
The
report also blasts trade associations, noting that "PACs affiliated with
these groups have contributed $7,678,598 to insurrectionist political groups,
including $5,251,098 to campaigns and leadership PACs directly."
While
slamming the companies that "have failed to stick to their commitments to
democracy," CREW's report also stresses that "it isn't all bad
news," explaining that "more than half of the nearly 250 companies
that said they would evaluate their political giving in the wake of the attack
have not made a donation to seditionists since."
"Toyota
stopped giving to seditionist members as a result of public pressure and after
receiving pushback from CREW. Hewlett Packard and Charles Schwab shut down
their PACs entirely," the report notes, adding that Hallmark Cards even
requested that Sens. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) and Roger Marshall (R-Kan.) return its
PAC's donations.
"These
examples show accountability is possible," the report says, "and
highlight the failures of companies who have continued to support the Sedition
Caucus."
Leading
up to the first anniversary of the Capitol attack, demands for accountability
and scrutiny of political contributions to Big Lie supporters have increased.
However, as Judd Legum pointed out Monday in his
newsletter Popular Information, a false narrative about the overall
state of corporate giving post-insurrection has emerged.
In
response to recent reporting that "relies on anecdotal
evidence," Popular Information revealed that based on
Federal Election Commission filings in 2021 and 2019, "since January 6,
corporate PAC contributions to Republican objectors have plummeted by nearly
two-thirds."
Legum
focused on House members who ran as incumbents in 2019 and were seeking
reelection in 2021, and found that "these 94 Republican objectors raised
$11,052,925 from corporate PACs through November 30, 2021, the most recent data
available."
"The
same 94 Republican objectors raised $27,205,290 from corporate PACs through
November 30, 2019," he explained. "So while the media narrative is
that corporate PAC contributions to Republican objectors have returned to
normal, the reality is that they've dropped by 60%."
While
exposing that "most corporate PACs have not 'moved beyond' January 6 and,
as a result, many Republican incumbents face fundraising deficits," Legum
also emphasized that if they "shift their normal donations to Republican
objectors from 2021 to 2022, the freeze will not be meaningful."