Announcement coincides with news that Meta will also contribute $1 million to the fund
Caden Pearson
Amazon said Thursday it will donate $1 million to President-elect Donald Trump’s inauguration fund and an additional $1 million in-kind donation by live-streaming the historical event on Prime Video.
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Jeff Bezos, november 2, 2021, photo: Chris Jackson/Getty Images |
Amazon’s announcement, first
reported by The Wall Street Journal, coincided with news that Meta, the parent
company of Facebook and Instagram, also contributed $1 million to Trump’s
inauguration fund.
The move marks a shift for tech leaders who appear to want to improve the previously rocky relations with Trump, who will take office next month.
Trump has previously
criticized the Amazon- and Jeff Bezos-owned The Washington Post over political
coverage. Bezos has publicly condemned some of Trump’s rhetoric and accused him
of bias in a 2019 lawsuit over a $10 billion Pentagon contract.
Bezos has recently softened
his stance, expressing optimism about Trump’s second term and endorsing
proposed regulatory reforms while at a business summit last week.
Bezos and Trump are set to
meet next week, potentially marking a turning point in their relationship.
Amazon’s donation and
live-streaming offer, as well as Meta’s donation, signal a strategic effort to
improve relations with Trump and his incoming administration after years of
tension.
Trump’s relationship with Meta was strained by the suspension of his Facebook and Instagram accounts in January 2021, following the breach of the Capitol. The company attributed the deplatforming to what they said was Trump’s “praise for people engaged in violence at the Capitol on January 6.”
The company restored his
accounts in early 2023 and announced stiffer penalties for public figures who
repeatedly violate its policies “in ways that incite or celebrate ongoing
violent events or civil unrest.”
This heightened scrutiny was
later revoked on July 12, one day before the attempted assassination of Trump
at a campaign rally in Pennsylvania.
Zuckerberg expressed praise
for Trump following his brush with death, and called him.
“Seeing Donald Trump get up after getting shot in the face and pump his fist in the air with the American flag is one of the most bad-[expletive] things I’ve ever seen in my life,” Zuckerberg told Bloomberg days after the shooting.
Trump’s stance on Zuckerberg
has also softened since the call, he revealed on the “Bussin’ With the Boys”
podcast. Trump said during the interview that he appreciated the tech leader’s
call and praised him for “staying out of the election.”
This was a reference to the
$400 million Zuckerberg and his wife donated $400 million to election offices
around the country during the 2020 elections, with 90 percent directed toward
Democrat-leaning counties in key swing states.
In recent months, Zuckerberg
has publicly supported some of Trump’s economic plans.
Stephen Miller, Trump’s
incoming deputy chief of staff for policy, has said Zuckerberg wants to support
and assist the president-elect in implementing national reforms. The donation
marks a turning point in the billionaires’ previously rocky relationship.
The Associated Press and
Samantha Flom contributed to this report.
Caden Pearson, The Epoch Times, 12/13/2024
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