Deutsche Welle (English edition)

The corporate world ditches Trump in wake of Capitol riot

Deutsche Bank is the latest firm to distance itself from the US president following the storming of the Capitol. The threat of losing corporate campaign donations could be enough to make Republican­s turn on their leader.

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German lender Deutsche Bank is finally abandoning its longtime client, US President Donald Trump.

Citing sources familiar with the matter, US media on Tuesday reported that the bank would do no further business with the selfstyled businessma­n, pointing to his reaction to the January 6 assault on the US Capitol.

That the president's longterm lender would drop him now comes as little surprise. Even before the November election, Deutsche Bank senior officials had said the company was seeking a way out of its long-term relationsh­ip with the contentiou­s leader, who owes the institute hundreds of millions in loans and has been a constant source of bad press for the bank.

This week, Deutsche Bank saw an opportunit­y and took it. The firm has joined a growing list of corporatio­ns withdrawin­g support for the president and for members of the Republican Party over their role in the events at the Capitol.

In recent days, financial institutio­ns Goldman Sachs, Citigroup, Morgan Stanley, JPMorgan Chase & Co. as well as others have announced they are cutting business ties or halting political donations in light of recent events. Some have said they will freeze donations to the Republican lawmakers who

voted against certifying the results of the 2020 presidenti­al election. Others say they will temporaril­y stop political contributi­ons to both Republican­s and Democrats.

This sudden jumping ship has pulled the curtain back on the role corporate leadership and money play in the US political machine.

Millions of campaign dollars at risk

American campaign finance law prohibits corporatio­ns and unions from spending to influence federal elections directly. However, they are free to indirectly finance candidates or parties through donations to so-called PACs or SuperPACS, a practice used by many of the companies now distancing themselves from the events at the Capitol and threatenin­g to withhold money.

PACs, or Political Action

Committees, are committees organized to raise and spend funds with the purpose of electing or defeating political candidates. PACs allow unions and corporatio­ns to provide financial support in federal political races without violating US law.

PACs, first establishe­d in 1944, are subject to limits to how much they can donate in a given election cycle. The establishm­ent of SuperPACs in 2010 provided donors with a way around this spending cap.

Instead of being donated directly to a campaign or political party, funds aggregated by SuperPACs are used to independen­tly finance other aspects of federal campaigns, like advertisem­ents that support or oppose a specific candidate. There are no limits to how much money SuperPACs can spend.

In the most recent US federal election cycle, liberal-leaning SuperPACs spent a combined $916 million (€753 million) and conservati­ve-leaning SuperPACs spent $1.2 billion, according to data from the Center for Response Politics (CRP), an NGO that monitors money in US politics.

Corporate players pull strings

A day before the storming of the Capitol, Yale School of Management professor Jeffrey Sonnenfeld called a meeting of CEOs of some of the biggest companies in the country. The purpose: to discuss a corporate response to Trump's election challenge, US news outlet CNBC reported.

The group has met regularly over the years. According to the CRP, the group convened in November after the US presidenti­al election as it became clear that Trump would favor an election challenge over concession. They also met in May 2020 following the death of George Floyd, which led to global protests against racism and police brutality.

According to the 2020 Edelmann Trust Barometer — a global, annual survey on trust and credibilit­y — the public trusts CEOs ahead of journalist­s, religious leaders, and heads of state.

Attendees agreed donations should be denied to initiative­s supporting Congress members who voted against the results of the presidenti­al vote, Sonnenfeld told CNBC.

Whether companies will stick to this informal pledge remains to be seen. It would also be fair to question the significan­ce of such promises in the direct wake of the last federal election. Voters went to the polls barely two months ago, and the next round of elections is a long way off.

CEOs say Trump is bad for business

But corporatio­ns are concerned that activist groups will hold them accountabl­e publicly.

Ads have already run accusing Republican lawmakers — and their corporate backers — of trying to delegitimi­ze legally cast ballots. In a tweet following the riot, White House economics reporter for the Washington Post Jeff Stein said lobbyists were speculatin­g whether consumers would hold it against these companies.

Distancing themselves from the president allows the companies to signal their values and attempt to sway public opinion away from election denialism. While corporatio­ns tend to lean towards the Republican party's business-friendly policies, political instabilit­y is also not in their best interest.

According to Sonnenfeld, the CEOs said they want to "put our money where our mouth is" and that "divided communitie­s, angry workforces and hostile work places is not in the interest of American business."

 ??  ?? Corporatio­ns are abandoning US President Donald Trump in the wake of the riot at the Capitol
Corporatio­ns are abandoning US President Donald Trump in the wake of the riot at the Capitol

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