Corporate donors funding Trump dark money group tied to racist views

By Andrew Perez

 

America First Policies, a nonprofit established last year by former Trump campaign officials, has received donations from Southern Company ($1 million), CVS Health ($500,000), and Dow Chemical ($100,000), according to corporate disclosures. Although America First Policies reportedly raised $26 million last year, it hasn’t disclosed any details about its finances yet and won’t file its first tax return until November.

In recent months, CNN found that America First Policies’ advocacy director made racist, sexist, anti-LGBT, and anti-Muslim comments online, while a policy staffer called President Barack Obama “the Islamchurian candidate.” Mediaite published a video of another policy adviser to the group saying that “the only thing the Nazis didn’t get right is they didn’t keep fucking going!”

Asked about the donations and the remarks by its staffers, America First Policies spokesperson Erin Montgomery said, “We don’t comment on stories by organizations funded by the radical left, including the Democracy Alliance and George Soros.”

MapLight, a Berkeley, California-based nonprofit organization that seeks to expand the public’s understanding of the role of money in politics, has accepted donations from an ideologically diverse collection of donors, including contributions from organizations and individuals affiliated with the Democracy Alliance and George Soros. MapLight discloses its donors publicly; America First Policies does not.

“CVS Health contributes to organizations across the political spectrum to help shape public policy and address legislation that has a direct impact on the company,” said CVS spokesperson Carolyn Castel. She said the company’s contribution was made to support advocacy efforts around the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, the Republican tax bill passed late last year, and added that the company has “zero tolerance for discriminatory actions or behaviors.”

“Comments made by employees of America First Policies that were reported after we made our contributions are unacceptable to us,” Castel said. “We have zero tolerance for discriminatory actions or behaviors, and as such we will not be making contributions to this organization in the future.”

 

Dow Chemical also said it will stop giving money to the pro-Trump nonprofit.

“Dow was not aware of any discriminatory actions by staffers at America First Policies. Dow … will not contribute to America First Policies going forward,” said Dow spokesperson Jarrod Erpelding.

Southern Company declined to comment.

CVS Health and Dow Chemical did not respond to questions from MapLight. Southern Company declined to comment.

“If [companies] have a problem with being associated with the racist, sexist, or homophobic comments of the people who are working for America First Policies . . . because they worry about what their clients or customers would say, then maybe they shouldn’t do it,” says Marge Baker, an executive vice president at People For The American Way, a progressive advocacy organization in Washington, D.C. “The dark money is such a problem because it allows you to be associated with it but not have any accountability.”

The corporate donors to America First Policies have benefited from Trump’s agenda in a variety of ways. CVS Health, Dow Chemical, and Southern Company all reported lobbying on the Republican tax bill passed in December. CVS, the Woonsocket, Rhode Island-based pharmacy and retail giant, has said the law will save the company about $1.2 billion this year. CVS is currently seeking the Trump administration’s approval for its purchase of the health insurer Aetna.

 

 

Southern Company, the Atlanta-based utility company, has long opposed the Clean Power Plan, an Obama-era rule designed to limit greenhouse gas emissions by power plants. Trump’s Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is working to repeal the plan.

And last year, the EPA reversed its effort to ban chlorpyrifos, a widely used pesticide produced by Dow Chemical that studies show can harm children’s brains. Dow’s former CEO, Andrew Liveris, previously served on a manufacturing council for Trump, and he reportedly attended a dinner that Vice President Mike Pence hosted at his official residence with major donors and corporate executives. Liveris stepped down as Dow’s chief executive in April, after the company completed its merger with DuPont to become the world’s largest chemical firm.

America First Policies reported spending $452,000 last year to support former Senator Luther Strange (R-AL) in his unsuccessful GOP primary bid, and it dropped almost $2.9 million opposing Democrat Jon Ossoff in the race for an open congressional seat in Georgia.

America First Policies has hosted events with Pence around the country this year to promote the Republican tax law passed in December. The organization recently announced it would spend nearly $1 million on advertisements to persuade conservative Democrats to back Trump’s pick for CIA director, Gina Haspel. She was confirmed two days later, with support from six Democratic senators.

This story has been updated with a comment from a CVS spokesperson.

 


This story was produced by MapLight, a nonprofit organization that reveals the influence of money in politics.

 

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