The first announcements came over the weekend. Blue Cross Blue Shield and Marriott International were among the prominent companies that said they would pause political contributions to congressional Republicans who voted to reject Joe Biden’s victory.
Others soon followed. While several corporate giants said they were cutting off financial support to both parties, NBC News reported overnight that Dow Chemical, American Express, Airbnb, Mastercard, Commerce Bank, and other companies said they will not donate to lawmakers involved in the push to deny Biden the presidency. Comcast, the parent company of NBCUniversal, which owns MSNBC (my employer), also said yesterday that it will suspend contributions “to those elected officials who voted against certification of the electoral college votes.”
Hallmark, meanwhile, is not only cutting off anti-election Republicans, it’s also requesting that Sens. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) and Roger Marshall (R-Kan.) give back the money Hallmark’s political action committee already contributed to the far-right Republicans, saying their recent actions “do not reflect our company’s values.”
Politico reported that the announcements have captured the GOP’s attention, to the point that House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) and his team started reaching out yesterday “to a vast number of corporations … to take their temperature.” And while many of the Republican’s corporate allies are staying the course for now, Politico added that the shifts pose a meaningful challenge.
Losing corporate PAC support — if the bans last — will sting Republicans who have come to rely on such contributions, especially as the Democratic Party builds a big online fundraising advantage. But the consequences could reach even farther than that, with the GOP also confronting the prospect of losing the support of white-collar company workers and executives who are infuriated over the insurrection.
To be sure, it’s an open question as to whether these corporate wallets stay closed. The attack on the Capitol was just six days ago, and it’s possible the corporate political action committees will reassess if tempers cool and the political landscape eventually returns to something resembling normalcy.
But in the meantime, it’s worth focusing special attention on one Republican in particular: Sen. Rick Scott of Florida.
The far-right Floridian was, of course, one of the eight GOP senators who voted at least once to reject Biden’s electoral college votes, even after the deadly insurrectionist riot. That means, at least for now, he’ll be among the Republicans losing out on corporate financial support as a response to his undemocratic tactics.









