By using this site, you agree to our Privacy Policy and our Terms of Use. Close

People in here really don't seem to understand how political donations work:

1. Companies themselves aren't allowed to give political donations (except through PAC's, which are closely regulated), so those Microsoft donations you are seeing are primarily donations from employees at Microsoft, not from Microsoft themselves.

2. Political Action Committees (PAC), the only way that corporations can directly fund a politician's campaign, are closely regulated by the Federal Government as well as most State Governments. They are required to be registered as a PAC with the FEC (Federal Election Commission) and submit detailed financial data afterwards, and the maximum allowed donation per candidate by a PAC is $5,000 per election cycle, a mere drop in the bucket compared to the millions of dollars of total donations that a US senator receives.

3. People here are mentioning that Microsoft's PAC gave Senator Kevin Cramer $5,000 in the last election. Cramer's total donations over the last 5 years were $6.925m, and Microsoft is not listed among his top 5 donors, $5,000 from Microsoft through a PAC is a drop in the bucket compared to his total donation amount and hardly enough to buy any sort of influence over his decisions. It's far more likely that he is actually concerned that Sony's anti-competitive moneyhatting strategies could harm the potential for growth of the video game industry within his state, just like he says.

4. Microsoft overwhelmingly funds Democrat politicians, and yet there are 4 Republicans mentioned in this article asking the Biden admin to pressure Japan about why their regulator is allowing Sony to moneyhat Japanese games off of Xbox when they already have a gargantuan marketshare lead over Xbox there.

5. While Microsoft isn't listed here and I can't find the employee donations by party for Microsoft, based on the donation track record of other big tech company employees, Microsoft's employees most likely also overwhelmingly donate to Democrat politicians (especially since Microsoft is headquartered in Washington, which is I believe the 5th most liberal state in the US as of the 2020 election).

Last edited by shikamaru317 - on 15 April 2023