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Immediately after the Jan. 6 attack, hundreds of corporations announced freezes on donating money to Republican lawmakers who had voted against certifying Joe Biden's victory. "Given recent events and the horrific attack on the U.S. Capitol, we are assessing our future PAC criteria," a spokesperson for Toyota said a week after the attack.
For many corporations, that pause was short-lived.
"By April 1, 2021, Toyota had donated $62,000 to 39 Republican objectors," journalist Judd Legum wrote in his newsletter, Popular Information. That included a donation of $1,000 that Toyota gave to Rep. Andy Biggs, R-Ariz., who is a close ally of Donald Trump and a fervent devotee of the "big lie."
In July 2021, Toyota reversed course and announced another hiatus from donating to lawmakers who voted to overturn the election results. Six months later, the money started to flow again. The company, in a statement to the Times, said it donates equally to both parties and "will not support those who, by their words and actions, create an atmosphere that incites violence." (Corporations aren't allowed to give directly to campaigns but instead form political action committees that donate in the name of the company.)
Giving equally to both parties sounds good. But what if a growing faction of one political party isn't committed to the rule of law and the peaceful transfer of power?
In the year and a half since the attack, rivers of cash from once skittish donors have resumed flowing to election deniers. Sometimes tens of thousands of dollars. Sometimes just a thousand. But it adds up. In April alone, the last month for which data is available, Fortune 500 companies and trade organizations gave more than $1.4 million to members of Congress who voted not to certify the election results, according to an analysis by the transparency group Accountable.US. AT&T led the pack, giving $95,000 to election objectors.