D.C.'s biggest corporate donors including Amazon, GE, Verizon and Best Buy plunge Republicans into cash crisis by boycotting 'treason caucus' and other firms stop ALL political donations
Republicans in Congress faced growing blowback on Monday from businesses that said they would cut off campaign contributions to those who voted last week to challenge President-elect Joe Biden's victory.
The announcements by Amazon.com, General Electric Co, Dow, AT&T, Comcast Corp, Verizon Communications, American Express Co, Airbnb, Best Buy and Mastercard, among others, threaten to throttle fundraising resources for Republicans who will soon be out of power in the White House and both chambers of Congress.
AT&T and Comcast, for example, are among the biggest corporate donors in Washington.
Popular Information reported that AT&T had donated $2 million in total to the 147 Republicans who voted to certify election results.
Greeting-card giant Hallmark Company said it had asked senators Josh Hawley and Roger Marshall to return its contributions.
Representatives for the two Republicans, who both objected to Biden's certification, did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
The announcements are a sign that some corporate donors, which typically spread their money widely around Capitol Hill, are re-assessing their strategy after supporters of President Donald Trump attacked the Capitol last week in an effort to prevent Congress from formalizing Biden's victory.
Target of donors' ire: Ted Cruz and other members of the 147 Republicans who voted to decertify Joe Biden's election, almost all persisting after the MAGA riot, are now being frozen out by corporate donors
Crisis: Rick Scott voted to overturn the votes in Pennsylvania. He went all in on Trump when he was governor to win Florida's Senate race in 2018 and is now in charge of all Republican fundraising for the Senate - but is himself being blocked from getting donations
It is unclear whether their decisions will have a lasting impact. Fundraising activity is currently at a post-election lull in Washington, giving businesses and trade groups some time to figure out their approach.
Few companies have gone as far as Dow, which said it would withhold donations for the Republican lawmakers' entire terms in office - up to six years for those in the Senate. Others said they would withhold donations temporarily, or suspend giving to Republicans and Democrats alike.
GE's suspension will last through the end of 2022 and then the employee board that oversees its political action committee will consider requests for support for those lawmakers who opposed certification 'on a case-by-case basis.'
At least five people died in last week's attack, which also forced lawmakers into hiding for several hours.
When they reconvened, 147 Republicans in the House of Representatives and the Senate voted to challenge Biden's victory in Pennsylvania or Arizona, even though both states already formally certified the results and election officials say there were no significant problems with the vote.
Those voting yes included the top two House Republicans, Kevin McCarthy and Steve Scalise, and Senator Rick Scott, who as incoming head of the National Republican Senatorial Committee will head up efforts to win back the Senate in the 2022 elections.
All of their jobs require extensive fundraising.
McCarthy and Scalise's offices did not respond to a request for comment. Representatives for Scott declined to comment.
Amazon said it would discuss concerns 'directly with those members we have previously supported' before deciding whether to resume contributions.
'This is spreading like wildfire,' said Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, a professor at Yale University´s management school who consults with CEOs. 'The U.S. business community has interests fully in alignment with the American public and not with Trump´s autocratic bigoted wing of the GOP.'
Yet the pausing of donations announced by many companies was unlikely to deliver a serious blow to Republicans in Congress who voted to overturn Biden's win.
'These are symbolic pledges,' said Sheila Krumholz, executive director of the Center for Responsive Politics, a nonpartisan group that traces the role money plays in politics. 'This is just one source of revenue and for some it´s vanishingly small, particularly in the Senate.'
Corporate-sponsored political action committees are limited to donating $5,000 per candidate each year. In races that often cost incumbents millions of dollars, such contributions account for just a small fraction of the overall fundraising picture.
The sheer extent of the Republican opposition will make it difficult for businesses to simply cut off those who voted against certifying Biden's victory, said a senior Republican business strategist, speaking on condition of anonymity. Roughly two-thirds of all House Republicans, including seasoned legislators and vocal Trump partisans, supported the challenge.
Business groups will be watching closely over the coming weeks to see whether those Republicans make gestures to re-establish a sense of normalcy, such as attending Biden's inauguration, the strategist said.
'Each of those people are going to be scrutinized,' the strategist said. 'Are they all going into the bucket of 'no contributions'? I would be shocked if they all get put in.'
A growing list of companies, including Ford Motor Co, Microsoft Corp, American Airlines, Alphabet Inc's Google, Facebook Inc, Goldman Sachs , BP Plc, Smithfield Foods Inc and Union Pacific Corp said they would temporarily suspend donations to Democrats and Republicans alike.
Trade associations, among the biggest donors in Washington, are moving more slowly.
The National Association of Beer Wholesalers, the National Association of Auto Dealers, and the American Bankers Association said they would re-assess their contribution strategy. Other top donors, including the National Association of Homebuilders and the National Association of Realtors, said they have yet to make a decision.
Several analysts said the boycott may not be permanent, as the need for access on Capitol Hill might ultimately outweigh the risk of being seen as an underwriter of those who weaken U.S. democracy.
'It´s very easy to suspend campaign contributions two months after an election. The question is whether these policies will remain in effect,' said Stanford University law professor Nathaniel Persily.
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