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Election: Biden has more of America’s top CEOs as donors, but Trump’s have given more

As the Nov. 3 election sparks record spending, here’s how the CEOs of S&P 500 companies are helping to fund the war chests of President Donald Trump and challenger Joe Biden, while also contributing to other Republican and Democratic politicians. Read More...

As the Nov. 3 election sparks record campaign contributions, the CEOs of S&P 500 companies are helping to fund the war chests of President Donald Trump and challenger Joe Biden, while also contributing to other Republican and Democratic politicians.

In their political giving as individuals, these chief executives have combined to give more to Trump than Biden. Some 15 CEOs whose companies are components of the S&P 500 SPX, +0.56% have donated a total of $2.489 million to Trump’s principal campaign committee, its joint fundraising groups with the Republican National Committee or pro-Trump super PACs.

Meanwhile, 30 chief execs have contributed $536,100 to Biden’s main campaign committee, its joint groups with the Democratic National Committee or pro-Biden super PACs. These figures come from a MarketWatch analysis of processed Federal Election Commission data on individual contributions made between January 2019 and August 2020. Anyone who held the CEO job in 2019 or 2020 at a company that was part of the S&P 500 is included.

As shown in the table below, the S&P CEOs giving the most to Trump were Intercontinental Exchange’s ICE, +0.61%  Jeffrey Sprecher, whose wife, Republican Sen. Kelly Loeffler of Georgia, faces a tough Senate race, and Las Vegas Sands’s LVS, -0.09%  Sheldon Adelson, a longtime major GOP donor. Also ranking high in dollar amounts donated were Vornado Realty Trust’s VNO, +1.54%  Steven Roth and Oracle’s ORCL, +0.40%  Safra Catz.

S&P 500 CEOs giving their own money to Trump’s campaign
CEO Company Sector Recipient Amount
1a Jeffrey Sprecher Intercontinental Exchange Financials America First Action $1,000,000.00
1b Jeffrey Sprecher Intercontinental Exchange Financials Trump Victory $290,300.00
1c Jeffrey Sprecher Intercontinental Exchange Financials Donald J. Trump for President $5,600.00
2a Sheldon Adelson Las Vegas Sands Consumer Discretionary Trump Victory $580,600.00
2b Sheldon Adelson Las Vegas Sands Consumer Discretionary Donald J. Trump for President $5,600.00
3a Steven Roth Vornado Realty Trust Real Estate Trump Victory $200,000.00
3b Steven Roth Vornado Realty Trust Real Estate Donald J. Trump for President $200.00
4a Safra Catz Oracle Information Technology Trump Victory $125,000.00
4b Safra Catz Oracle Information Technology Donald J. Trump for President $5,600.00
5a Jayson Adair Copart Industrials Trump Victory $100,000.00
5b Jayson Adair Copart Industrials Donald J. Trump for President $5,600.00
6a David Farr Emerson Electric Industrials Trump Victory $50,000.00
6b David Farr Emerson Electric Industrials Donald J. Trump for President $5,525.00
7a Timothy Sloan* Wells Fargo Financials Trump Victory $35,500.00
7b Timothy Sloan* Wells Fargo Financials Donald J. Trump for President $5,600.00
8a Alan Miller Universal Health Services Health Care Trump Victory $25,000.00
8b Alan Miller Universal Health Services Health Care Donald J. Trump for President $5,600.00
9a William Hornbuckle MGM Resorts International Consumer Discretionary Trump Victory $17,500.63
9b William Hornbuckle MGM Resorts International Consumer Discretionary Donald J. Trump for President $5,600.00
10a James Fish Waste Management Industrials Donald J. Trump for President $2,707.50
10b James Fish Waste Management Industrials Trump Make America Great Again $2,610.00
11a Scott Farmer Cintas Industrials Trump Victory $2,500.00
11b Scott Farmer Cintas Industrials Donald J. Trump for President $2,500.00
12a John Chiminski Catalent Health Care Trump Make America Great Again $2,043.02
12b John Chiminski Catalent Health Care Donald J. Trump for President $1,942.69
13a Scott Donnelly Textron Industrials Trump Make America Great Again $1,750.00
13b Scott Donnelly Textron Industrials Donald J. Trump for President $1,375.00
14 Steve Sanghi Microchip Technology Information Technology Donald J. Trump for President $2,800.00
15a Dan Dinges Cabot Oil & Gas Energy Trump Make America Great Again $250.00
15b Dan Dinges Cabot Oil & Gas Energy Donald J. Trump for President $187.50
Total $2,489,491.34

* Former CEO who held the position during the FEC’s 2020 election cycle that started Jan. 1, 2019

Source: MarketWatch analysis of processed Federal Election Commission data on individual contributions made between January 2019 and August 2020

The S&P 500 bosses donating the most to Biden were Disney’s DIS, +0.04%  Bob Iger, who is currently the entertainment company’s executive chairman after leaving the CEO post in February, as well as Amphenol’s APH, +0.79% Richard Norwitt, DuPont’s DD, +2.44% Edward Breen, Merck’s MRK, +0.58%  Kenneth Frazier and Vertex Pharmaceuticals’s VRTX, +0.16%  Jeffrey Leiden.

Overall spending in this year’s election will approach $11 billion, easily topping the $7 billion spent (in today’s dollars) in the 2016 election, according to the Center for Responsive Politics, a nonprofit group that tracks money in politics.

One CEO, MGM Resorts International’s MGM, +1.09%  Bill Hornbuckle, gave to both Trump and Biden, according to MarketWatch’s analysis of disclosures. He contributed $17,501 to the Trump Victory Fund, a joint fundraising committee with the RNC, plus the maximum amount of $5,600 to Trump’s primary campaign committee. He donated $2,800 to Biden’s main campaign committee.

Related:These are the basics of campaign finance in 2020 — in two handy charts

And see:Politicians keep coordinating with super PACs and other supposedly independent groups, study finds

S&P 500 CEOs giving their own money to Biden’s campaign
CEO Company Sector Recipient Amount
1a Robert Iger* Disney Communication Services Biden Victory Fund $250,000.00
1b Robert Iger* Disney Communication Services Biden for President $5,600.00
2a Edward Breen DuPont de Nemours Materials Biden Victory Fund $50,000.00
2b Edward Breen DuPont de Nemours Materials Biden for President $5,600.00
3a Kenneth Frazier Merck Health Care Biden Victory Fund $50,000.00
3b Kenneth Frazier Merck Health Care Biden for President $5,600.00
4a Richard Norwitt Amphenol Corporation Information Technology Biden Victory Fund $50,000.00
4b Richard Norwitt Amphenol Corporation Information Technology Biden for President $5,600.00
5 Jeffrey Leiden* Vertex Pharmaceuticals Health Care Unite the Country $25,000.00
6a David Kenny Nielsen Holdings Industrials Biden for President $5,600.00
6b David Kenny Nielsen Holdings Industrials Biden Victory Fund $2,800.00
7 Debra Cafaro Ventas Real Estate Biden for President $5,600.00
8 John Donahoe Nike Consumer Discretionary Biden for President $5,600.00
9 Ronald O’Hanley State Street Financials Biden for President $5,600.00
10 Ted Sarandos Netflix Communication Services Biden for President $5,600.00
11 Andrew Silvernail Idex Industrials Biden for President $5,500.00
12 Joshua Silverman Etsy Consumer Discretionary Biden for President $3,300.00
13 Stanley Bergman Henry Schein Health Care Biden for President $2,800.00
14 Steven Cahillane Kellogg’s Consumer Staples Biden for President $2,800.00
15 Steven Collis AmerisourceBergen Health Care Biden for President $2,800.00
16 Timothy Gokey Broadridge Financial Solutions Information Technology Biden for President $2,800.00
17 Reed Hastings Netflix Communication Services Biden for President $2,800.00
18 William Hornbuckle MGM Resorts International Consumer Discretionary Biden for President $2,800.00
19 Stephen Kaufer Tripadvisor** Communication Services Biden for President $2,800.00
20 Tom Leighton Akamai Information Technology Biden for President $2,800.00
21 Charlie Lowrey Prudential Financial Financials Biden for President $2,800.00
22 Joseph Margolis Extra Space Storage Real Estate Biden for President $2,800.00
23 Michael McMullen Agilent Health Care Biden for President $2,800.00
24 James Murren* MGM Resorts International Consumer Discretionary Biden for President $2,800.00
25 Sumit Roy Realty Income Real Estate Biden for President $2,800.00
26 Michael Schall Essex Property Trust Real Estate Biden for President $2,800.00
27 Arne Sorenson Marriott International Consumer Discretionary Biden for President $2,800.00
28 Owen Thomas Boston Properties Real Estate Biden for President $2,800.00
29 Bradley Tilden Alaska Air Group Industrials Biden for President $2,800.00
30 Devin Stockfish Weyerhaeuser Real Estate Biden for President $1,500.00
Total $536,100.00

* Former CEO who held the position during the FEC’s 2020 election cycle that started Jan. 1, 2019

** Former S&P 500 company that was a component of the index during the FEC’s 2020 election cycle that started Jan. 1, 2019

Source: MarketWatch analysis of processed Federal Election Commission data on individual contributions made between January 2019 and August 2020

CEOs who have donated to Trump’s campaign may be showing that they’re pleased with his policies, such as the 2017 tax cuts, said Michael Beckel, research director at Issue One, a nonpartisan watchdog group that aims to reduce the influence of big money in politics.

“Some corporate executives may see their political contributions as good investments in policies that will benefit them,” Beckel told MarketWatch in an email. Many of them “see themselves as having a fiduciary responsibility to be active in politics.”

Execs also may donate “based on their own political preferences and ideological leanings,” even as their political contributions could “carry some risks for companies,” Beckel said. “An executive’s giving could turn off a segment of customers from their brand, and even lead to protests or boycotts.”

Bruce Freed, president of the Center for Political Accountability, a nonprofit that pushes for better disclosure of corporate political activity, also noted the potential challenges for CEOs as they vote with their wallets.

“Companies today face very serious risks — both reputational risks and bottom-line risks — for contributions that companies are making,” Freed said in an interview. The donations can “conflict with their core values and positions” on issues such as racial justice or climate change, he said, adding that his organization has explored the situation in its “Conflicted Consequences” and “Collision Course” reports.

“All of these things have made political spending much more controversial for companies and executives — and much riskier,” he said.

Related:Watchdog says Washington’s growing swampier, even as coronavirus lockdowns let Congress climb off ‘hamster wheel of fundraising’

And see:S&P 500 companies are protecting themselves from today’s inflamed politics, study finds

Companies’ responses

Intercontinental Exchange, Las Vegas Sands, Vornado Realty, Oracle, Disney, DuPont, Merck, Amphenol and Vertex didn’t respond to requests for comment. Oracle’s Catz worked in 2016 on Trump’s transition team, while Disney’s Iger and Merck’s Frazier are among the executives who have shown their opposition to the president’s actions by resigning from his White House councils. Iger cited Trump’s withdrawal from the Paris climate agreement, and Frazier was responding to the president’s initial reaction to racial violence in Charlottesville, Va., in 2017.

A spokeswoman for Wells Fargo WFC, +1.06%, whose former chief executive, Tim Sloan, gave to Trump’s campaign, said his donation “was a personal contribution and was in no way related to his time as CEO of Wells Fargo, which ended a year and a half ago.” A Waste Management spokesman said the company doesn’t comment on the “personal political contributions of our employees.”

Among the Biden donors, a Boston Properties BXP, +1.14%  spokeswoman said “personal political contributions” made by the company’s CEO or other employees are “personal decisions.” A Marriott International MAR, -0.10% spokeswoman said the hotel company “will not be commenting on any personal contributions made by our CEO or any other executive,” and a Tripadvisor TRIP, -0.79%  spokesman said the travel company does “not comment on the personal contributions made by employees or executives within this company.” A Henry Schein HSIC, +2.50%  spokeswoman said the health-care products company “makes no national political campaign contributions, per its Worldwide Business Standards,” and “individual contributions are just that — individual donations that have nothing to do with the company.”

Netflix NFLX, -1.58%, Nielsen NLSN, -0.06% and Broadridge Financial Solutions BR, +0.77%  declined to comment. The other companies listed in the tables above didn’t respond to requests for comment.

S&P 500 CEOs give much more to Republicans

The higher dollar total for Trump’s campaign aligns with how Republican groups overall have attracted more money from S&P 500 CEOs than Democratic groups.

Some 179 of these CEOs donated a total of $35.61 million of their own money to Republican candidates and organizations, while 148 bosses combined to contribute $3.172 million to Democratic efforts, according to MarketWatch’s analysis of outlays between January 2019 and August 2020.

Most of the GOP’s big advantage comes from Las Vegas Sands’s Adelson, who has given $26.38 million to Republicans, including $25 million to the Senate Leadership Fund, a super PAC aiming to protect and expand on the GOP majority in the U.S. Senate. But even with Adelson excluded, Republicans come out ahead in drawing donations from the S&P CEOs, with $9.233 million in 2019 and 2020, tripling the Democratic haul.

Related: Democrats’ chances of Senate takeover rise, and that could affect health care, energy and financial services

And see:If the Democrats win the Senate, Big Tech better be ready for a bigger fight

Many of the S&P CEOs — 81 of them, to be exact — contributed to both Republican and Democratic groups. In other words, only 98 of the 179 GOP donors gave just to the GOP, and only 67 of the Democratic donors gave just to that party’s groups.

The greater giving to Republicans by the S&P CEOs in the current election cycle fits with their past behavior. Ahead of the 2018 midterm elections, a MarketWatch analysis found 200 S&P chief execs had given a total of $7.4 million to the GOP, while 149 donated a total of $2.6 million to Democrats.

MarketWatch’s analysis here doesn’t cover political contributions by current or former executives of privately held companies, such as billionaire Michael Bloomberg, as it focuses instead on chief executives of the S&P 500’s large, publicly traded companies.

Now read:Biden topped Trump in cash on hand as September began

And see:Trump says he might spend his own money on his re-election campaign

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