Namrata Sen
Fri, August 15, 2025
Benzinga
The White House has reportedly created a rating system to evaluate the support of corporate America for President Donald Trump’s “One Big Beautiful Bill” and other policies.
White House Rates 553 firms on support for Trump policies
The White House has developed a scorecard evaluating 553 companies and trade associations on their support for the “One Big Beautiful Bill” and other Trump policies. Distributed among senior staff, the ratings will serve as a reference when reviewing corporate requests, according to Axios.
The rating system evaluates multiple factors, including social media activity, press releases, video testimonials, advertisements, participation in White House events, and other forms of engagement connected to the OB3. Based on these criteria, companies are classified as strong, moderate, or low supporters.
Trending: The same firms that backed Uber, Venmo and eBay are investing in this pre-IPO company disrupting a $1.8T market — and you can too at just $2.90/share.
The system is also expected to evolve as it will include the companies’ engagement with other presidential initiatives. The official responsible for the rating system stated, “If groups/companies want to start advocating more now for the tax bill or additional administration priorities, we will take that into account in our grading.”
White House Lists Major Companies as Key Supporters of Bill, Other Trump Initiatives
Some of the companies that have been identified as “good partners” by the White House include Uber (NYSE:UBER), DoorDash (NYSE:DASH), United (NASDAQ:UAL), Delta (NYSE:DAL), AT&T (NYSE:T), Cisco (NASDAQ:CSCO), Airlines for America, and the Steel Manufacturers Association.
The support from these corporations has been evident in various ways. DoorDash deliverer Maliki Krieski, for instance, publicly supported the bill at a White House event. Uber celebrated the “No Tax on Tips” provision, a part of the bill, on a blog for drivers. Cisco’s CEO, Chuck Robbins, expressed his approval of the corporate tax provisions in the bill on social media. AT&T announced plans to expedite fiber infrastructure development, attributing it to the bill.
CEOs Show Growing Support For Trump's Key Economic Policies
White House Rates 553 firms on support for Trump policies
The White House has developed a scorecard evaluating 553 companies and trade associations on their support for the “One Big Beautiful Bill” and other Trump policies. Distributed among senior staff, the ratings will serve as a reference when reviewing corporate requests, according to Axios.
The rating system evaluates multiple factors, including social media activity, press releases, video testimonials, advertisements, participation in White House events, and other forms of engagement connected to the OB3. Based on these criteria, companies are classified as strong, moderate, or low supporters.
Trending: The same firms that backed Uber, Venmo and eBay are investing in this pre-IPO company disrupting a $1.8T market — and you can too at just $2.90/share.
The system is also expected to evolve as it will include the companies’ engagement with other presidential initiatives. The official responsible for the rating system stated, “If groups/companies want to start advocating more now for the tax bill or additional administration priorities, we will take that into account in our grading.”
White House Lists Major Companies as Key Supporters of Bill, Other Trump Initiatives
Some of the companies that have been identified as “good partners” by the White House include Uber (NYSE:UBER), DoorDash (NYSE:DASH), United (NASDAQ:UAL), Delta (NYSE:DAL), AT&T (NYSE:T), Cisco (NASDAQ:CSCO), Airlines for America, and the Steel Manufacturers Association.
The support from these corporations has been evident in various ways. DoorDash deliverer Maliki Krieski, for instance, publicly supported the bill at a White House event. Uber celebrated the “No Tax on Tips” provision, a part of the bill, on a blog for drivers. Cisco’s CEO, Chuck Robbins, expressed his approval of the corporate tax provisions in the bill on social media. AT&T announced plans to expedite fiber infrastructure development, attributing it to the bill.
CEOs Show Growing Support For Trump's Key Economic Policies
In the recent past, several CEOs have openly supported Trump’s policies and initiatives, whether it’s related to tariffs, manufacturing in the U.S., or the spending bill. For instance, Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) CEO Tim Cook presented Trump with a 24-karat gold-based plaque after securing an exemption from a 100% chip tariff.
Similarly, Nvidia (NASDAQ:NVDA) CEO Jensen Huang hailed Trump’s efforts to re-industrialize technology manufacturing, stating that it was the right move for the nation.
At the same time, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman had a change of heart on Trump. He later admitted that his perspective on the President had evolved after observing him more closely. These examples illustrate the impact of corporate support on the Trump administration’s policies.
Similarly, Nvidia (NASDAQ:NVDA) CEO Jensen Huang hailed Trump’s efforts to re-industrialize technology manufacturing, stating that it was the right move for the nation.
At the same time, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman had a change of heart on Trump. He later admitted that his perspective on the President had evolved after observing him more closely. These examples illustrate the impact of corporate support on the Trump administration’s policies.
Trump team has created a secret list ranking companies on how loyal they are

President Donald Trump’s team has reportedly created a list of companies ranked in order of how supportive they are of the administration’s agenda (Getty Images)
A White House official familiar with the situation confirmed the existence of the dynamic scorecard toThe Independent. The administration plans to use it to incorporate the support of present and future administration initiatives.
Demonstrating a desire or willingness to work with the administration yields rewards in the form of federal investments or beneficial policies. However, those who push back on Trump have had federal funding revoked or been passed up for opportunities.
One recent example is Apple’s $600 billion investment in the U.S. to accelerate artificial intelligence development and establish supply chain production.
Over the last few months, the tech giant has faced the possibility of higher consumer prices on its products, most of which are made overseas, due to Trump’s tariffs. That possibility became almost a reality after the president said he would implement tariffs on semiconductors
But those fears were settled during Trump’s press conference with Apple CEO Tim Cook to announce the investment when the president revealed major exemptions for the semiconductor tariff.

Apple CEO Tim Cook gifted Donald Trump a statue while announcing a multi-billion-dollar investment in the US (Getty Images)

Trump poses with a set of vintage Olympic medals during an event announcing the White House task force for the 2028 Summer Olympics (AP)

Donald Trump with FIFA president Gianni Infantino and the Club World Cup trophy, which now sits in the Oval Office. (Getty Images)
"If groups/companies want to start advocating more now for the tax bill or additional administration priorities, we will take that into account in our grading," the unnamed White House official told Axios.
During the Apple press conference, Cook also presented Trump with a 24k gold and glass statue created by the tech company.
Trump, a known lover of lavish gifts, has recently received several trophies from organizations he’s collaborating with. He was gifted a set of vintage Olympic medals while announcing the task force for the 2028 Los Angeles Summer Olympics. He was also given a $400 million Boeing jet from the Qatari royal family to serve as a new Air Force One. He was also gifted the inaugural Club World Cup trophy by FIFA President Gianni Infantino
Other companies have taken similar steps to align themselves closer with Trump in the hopes of getting on the president’s good side. Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced the company would scrap its fact checkers on Facebook – which Trump allies often assert was biased toward liberals.
Amazon and Meta got rid of their diversity, equity, and inclusion policies, which Trump has long bashed.
Other tech leaders have praised Trump or shown up at White House events to get on the president’s good side. OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, who was at Trump’s inauguration, was one of the companies to score a lucrative AI deal with the administration.
Opinion
Trump Has a Bonkers New Rating System for Private Companies
Ellie Quinlan Houghtaling
Fri, August 15, 2025 at 12:24 PM MDT
THE NEW REPUBLIC

Donald Trump’s loyalty test is stretching far beyond the confines of the White House.
The Trump administration has released a scorecard to rank the endeavors of some 553 companies and trade associations to advance the president’s agenda and his “big, beautiful bill.”
Organizations are ranked on the sheet as strong, moderate, or low, Axios reported Friday, with ratings built off social media posts, press releases, video testimonials, ads, White House event attendance, and other budget law–oriented efforts.
The data is being circulated among White House senior staff as a temperature gauge on how to interact with companies and open calls with K Street (a nickname for Washington’s business district).
Some of these “good partners” include Uber, DoorDash, United, Delta, AT&T, Cisco, Airlines for America, and the Steel Manufacturers Association, according to Axios.
The scoresheet “helps us see who really goes out and helps vs. those who just come in and pay lip service,” a senior White House official told the publication. But that doesn’t mean the project is done—instead, the administration plans to continue updating the list, considering it an evolving document as more corporate behavior plays out in relation to Trump’s agenda.
“If groups/companies want to start advocating more now for the tax bill or additional administration priorities, we will take that into account in our grading,” the official said.
Loyalty has been a chief internal priority for Trump and his team since before the election. That common denominator carried more weight than practically any other quality as the forty-seventh president selected dozens of nominees to lead different agencies, nearly all of whom had previously lent a hand to Trump in his criminal trials, donated money to his political campaign, or helped build out one of his presidential transition playbooks, such as Project 2025.
Secret White House spreadsheet ranks US companies based on loyalty to Trump
Cameron Henderson
Fri, August 15, 2025

Posting on Truth Social, Mr Trump said the investment banker should focus on being a DJ – one of his former hobbies – and “not bother running a major financial institution”.
The president has also butted heads with the leaders of JP Morgan Chase and Bank of America, claiming the banks had refused to accept more than $1bn in deposits.
Mr Trump has signed an executive order requiring banks not to discriminate against clients on political grounds, in a move that could cause further headaches for the industry.
The White House has made public a parallel list tracking the so-called Trump effect, referring to announcements of investments in US manufacturing, production and innovation during the president’s second term.
It comes as the president is increasingly seeking to exert control over corporate America through protectionist measures, offering tax relief to businesses that bring jobs back to the US and threatening to impose tariffs on those that do not.
Business leaders have scrambled to pay homage to the president, offering the US government stakes in their companies and even bestowing personal gifts on the president in a bid to avoid sanctions
Last week, US chip manufacturer Nvidia agreed for the US government to take 15pc of the company’s revenues generated in China as part of an agreement to restart exports to Beijing.
The unprecedented pact came after Mr Trump barred sales of Nvidia’s H20 technology in China earlier this year to boost his tit-for-tat trade war with Beijing, wiping billions of dollars from the $4tn company’s value in the process.
Tim Cook, the Apple chief executive, last week agreed to invest $100bn in American manufacturing after the president pledged to impose 100pc tariffs on foreign microchip imports.
The tech giant’s commitment to US manufacturing – as well as Mr Cook’s gift of a glass plaque with a 24-carat gold base – earned the company a reprieve from Mr Trump.
White House Creates Secret List of Biggest Corporate Enemies

Trump takes the stage during a reception for Republican members of the House of Representatives after passing the One Big Beautiful Bill Act. / Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images
The White House has already identified “good partners” whose enthusiasm earned them high marks: Uber, DoorDash, United Airlines, Delta Air Lines, AT&T, Cisco, Airlines for America, and the Steel Manufacturers Association.
Uber, for example, name-checked Trump in a celebratory message about his bill, in a May blog post.
“No Tax on Tips is now law. No Tax on Tips, first proposed by President Trump during his 2024 presidential campaign, is a proposal to change how tips are taxed,” it read.
“Now that this has become law, you won’t pay federal income taxes on your tips that are reported to the IRS on a 1099 form.”
The list is circulating among senior staff, while a separate public-facing tracker on the White House website logs “Trump Effect” investments in U.S. manufacturing, production, and innovation.

Uber is on the Trump administration list, presumably on a good footing. / SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images
According to the official, the document will expand to include support for other administration priorities, meaning companies can still raise their grades—if they boost their public advocacy.
“If groups/companies want to start advocating more now for the tax bill or additional administration priorities, we will take that into account,” the official said.
Ariana Baio
Fri, August 15, 2025
The White House is reportedly maintaining a list of more than 500 companies that are ranked in order of willingness to work with the Trump administration and support the president’s agenda.
The spreadsheet, which ranks companies based on low, moderate, or strong support, is supposed to serve as a reference for White House staffers when they’re speaking with representatives from the companies, a senior administration official told Axios.
Several factors determine a company’s ranking, including attendance at White House events, engagement in promoting or supporting Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act, writing press releases, making social media posts, and more.
Companies considered “strong” have expressed support for Trump’s agenda by praising industry-specific perks in Trump’s bill, such as no taxes on tips or investments in infrastructure. Other “strong” companies have made prominent investments in the United States to support Trump’s tariff goal.
While most the companies on the list remain secret, examples of “good partners,” Axios says, includes Uber, DoorDash, United, Delta and AT&T, Cisco, Airlines for America and the Steel Manufacturers Association.
Fri, August 15, 2025
The White House is reportedly maintaining a list of more than 500 companies that are ranked in order of willingness to work with the Trump administration and support the president’s agenda.
The spreadsheet, which ranks companies based on low, moderate, or strong support, is supposed to serve as a reference for White House staffers when they’re speaking with representatives from the companies, a senior administration official told Axios.
Several factors determine a company’s ranking, including attendance at White House events, engagement in promoting or supporting Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act, writing press releases, making social media posts, and more.
Companies considered “strong” have expressed support for Trump’s agenda by praising industry-specific perks in Trump’s bill, such as no taxes on tips or investments in infrastructure. Other “strong” companies have made prominent investments in the United States to support Trump’s tariff goal.
While most the companies on the list remain secret, examples of “good partners,” Axios says, includes Uber, DoorDash, United, Delta and AT&T, Cisco, Airlines for America and the Steel Manufacturers Association.
President Donald Trump’s team has reportedly created a list of companies ranked in order of how supportive they are of the administration’s agenda (Getty Images)
A White House official familiar with the situation confirmed the existence of the dynamic scorecard toThe Independent. The administration plans to use it to incorporate the support of present and future administration initiatives.
Demonstrating a desire or willingness to work with the administration yields rewards in the form of federal investments or beneficial policies. However, those who push back on Trump have had federal funding revoked or been passed up for opportunities.
One recent example is Apple’s $600 billion investment in the U.S. to accelerate artificial intelligence development and establish supply chain production.
Over the last few months, the tech giant has faced the possibility of higher consumer prices on its products, most of which are made overseas, due to Trump’s tariffs. That possibility became almost a reality after the president said he would implement tariffs on semiconductors
But those fears were settled during Trump’s press conference with Apple CEO Tim Cook to announce the investment when the president revealed major exemptions for the semiconductor tariff.
Apple CEO Tim Cook gifted Donald Trump a statue while announcing a multi-billion-dollar investment in the US (Getty Images)
Trump poses with a set of vintage Olympic medals during an event announcing the White House task force for the 2028 Summer Olympics (AP)
Donald Trump with FIFA president Gianni Infantino and the Club World Cup trophy, which now sits in the Oval Office. (Getty Images)
"If groups/companies want to start advocating more now for the tax bill or additional administration priorities, we will take that into account in our grading," the unnamed White House official told Axios.
During the Apple press conference, Cook also presented Trump with a 24k gold and glass statue created by the tech company.
Trump, a known lover of lavish gifts, has recently received several trophies from organizations he’s collaborating with. He was gifted a set of vintage Olympic medals while announcing the task force for the 2028 Los Angeles Summer Olympics. He was also given a $400 million Boeing jet from the Qatari royal family to serve as a new Air Force One. He was also gifted the inaugural Club World Cup trophy by FIFA President Gianni Infantino
Other companies have taken similar steps to align themselves closer with Trump in the hopes of getting on the president’s good side. Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced the company would scrap its fact checkers on Facebook – which Trump allies often assert was biased toward liberals.
Amazon and Meta got rid of their diversity, equity, and inclusion policies, which Trump has long bashed.
Other tech leaders have praised Trump or shown up at White House events to get on the president’s good side. OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, who was at Trump’s inauguration, was one of the companies to score a lucrative AI deal with the administration.
Opinion
Trump Has a Bonkers New Rating System for Private Companies
Ellie Quinlan Houghtaling
Fri, August 15, 2025 at 12:24 PM MDT
THE NEW REPUBLIC
Donald Trump’s loyalty test is stretching far beyond the confines of the White House.
The Trump administration has released a scorecard to rank the endeavors of some 553 companies and trade associations to advance the president’s agenda and his “big, beautiful bill.”
Organizations are ranked on the sheet as strong, moderate, or low, Axios reported Friday, with ratings built off social media posts, press releases, video testimonials, ads, White House event attendance, and other budget law–oriented efforts.
The data is being circulated among White House senior staff as a temperature gauge on how to interact with companies and open calls with K Street (a nickname for Washington’s business district).
Some of these “good partners” include Uber, DoorDash, United, Delta, AT&T, Cisco, Airlines for America, and the Steel Manufacturers Association, according to Axios.
The scoresheet “helps us see who really goes out and helps vs. those who just come in and pay lip service,” a senior White House official told the publication. But that doesn’t mean the project is done—instead, the administration plans to continue updating the list, considering it an evolving document as more corporate behavior plays out in relation to Trump’s agenda.
“If groups/companies want to start advocating more now for the tax bill or additional administration priorities, we will take that into account in our grading,” the official said.
Loyalty has been a chief internal priority for Trump and his team since before the election. That common denominator carried more weight than practically any other quality as the forty-seventh president selected dozens of nominees to lead different agencies, nearly all of whom had previously lent a hand to Trump in his criminal trials, donated money to his political campaign, or helped build out one of his presidential transition playbooks, such as Project 2025.
Secret White House spreadsheet ranks US companies based on loyalty to Trump
Cameron Henderson
Fri, August 15, 2025
TELEGRAPH, UK

Apple chief executive Tim Cook last week announced a commitment to US manufacturing and gave Donald Trump a glass plaque with a 24-carat gold base - Brendan Smialowski/AFP via Getty Images
Donald Trump has drawn up a scorecard for corporate America, ranking companies based on their loyalty to his administration.
The highly unusual list ranks 533 businesses and trade organisations based on their efforts to champion the US president’s “one big beautiful bill”, according to reports.
Companies that have fared well deployed a variety of tactics – often trumpeting the benefits of an individual policy, such as Uber’s celebration of Mr Trump’s “no tax on tips” proposal.
The scorecard, which Axios said will aid decision-making on corporate requests, comes as part of Mr Trump’s “America First” agenda and protectionist policies.
The chart allegedly ranks enterprises’ levels of support as either strong, moderate or low based on a series of factors.
Actions that affect a company’s rating are said to include social media posts, adverts, press releases, video testimonials, attendance at White House events and other engagements related to “OB3” – the administration’s nickname for the president’s set-piece tax and spending legislation.
According to Axios, businesses seen as “good partners” on the White House list include DoorDash, United Airlines, Delta Airlines, Uber, AT&T, Cisco, Airlines for America and the Steel Manufacturers Association.
AT&T recently announced “plans to more quickly build fiber infrastructure thanks to pro-investment policies in the one big beautiful bill act passed by Congress”.
Meanwhile Airlines for America – which represents major US airlines including United and Delta – lauded the bill’s $12.5bn (£9.2bn) investment in air traffic control.
The spreadsheet is said to be an evolving document, to which businesses’ support for other presidential initiatives can be added.
The ranking “helps us see who really goes out and helps vs those who just come in and pay lip service,” an official told the news outlet.
“If groups/companies want to start advocating more now for the tax bill or additional administration priorities, we will take that into account in our grading,” the official added.
ear which businesses rank low on the list but those likely to have taken a hit may include clean energy companies, who heavily criticised the bill’s rollback of green incentives.
Mr Trump has also clashed with Wall Street in recent weeks. The president this week hit out at David Solomon, the Goldman Sachs chief executive, saying the bank had been wrong to predict that imposing US tariffs would hurt the US economy.
Apple chief executive Tim Cook last week announced a commitment to US manufacturing and gave Donald Trump a glass plaque with a 24-carat gold base - Brendan Smialowski/AFP via Getty Images
Donald Trump has drawn up a scorecard for corporate America, ranking companies based on their loyalty to his administration.
The highly unusual list ranks 533 businesses and trade organisations based on their efforts to champion the US president’s “one big beautiful bill”, according to reports.
Companies that have fared well deployed a variety of tactics – often trumpeting the benefits of an individual policy, such as Uber’s celebration of Mr Trump’s “no tax on tips” proposal.
The scorecard, which Axios said will aid decision-making on corporate requests, comes as part of Mr Trump’s “America First” agenda and protectionist policies.
The chart allegedly ranks enterprises’ levels of support as either strong, moderate or low based on a series of factors.
Actions that affect a company’s rating are said to include social media posts, adverts, press releases, video testimonials, attendance at White House events and other engagements related to “OB3” – the administration’s nickname for the president’s set-piece tax and spending legislation.
According to Axios, businesses seen as “good partners” on the White House list include DoorDash, United Airlines, Delta Airlines, Uber, AT&T, Cisco, Airlines for America and the Steel Manufacturers Association.
AT&T recently announced “plans to more quickly build fiber infrastructure thanks to pro-investment policies in the one big beautiful bill act passed by Congress”.
Meanwhile Airlines for America – which represents major US airlines including United and Delta – lauded the bill’s $12.5bn (£9.2bn) investment in air traffic control.
The spreadsheet is said to be an evolving document, to which businesses’ support for other presidential initiatives can be added.
The ranking “helps us see who really goes out and helps vs those who just come in and pay lip service,” an official told the news outlet.
“If groups/companies want to start advocating more now for the tax bill or additional administration priorities, we will take that into account in our grading,” the official added.
ear which businesses rank low on the list but those likely to have taken a hit may include clean energy companies, who heavily criticised the bill’s rollback of green incentives.
Mr Trump has also clashed with Wall Street in recent weeks. The president this week hit out at David Solomon, the Goldman Sachs chief executive, saying the bank had been wrong to predict that imposing US tariffs would hurt the US economy.
Posting on Truth Social, Mr Trump said the investment banker should focus on being a DJ – one of his former hobbies – and “not bother running a major financial institution”.
The president has also butted heads with the leaders of JP Morgan Chase and Bank of America, claiming the banks had refused to accept more than $1bn in deposits.
Mr Trump has signed an executive order requiring banks not to discriminate against clients on political grounds, in a move that could cause further headaches for the industry.
The White House has made public a parallel list tracking the so-called Trump effect, referring to announcements of investments in US manufacturing, production and innovation during the president’s second term.
It comes as the president is increasingly seeking to exert control over corporate America through protectionist measures, offering tax relief to businesses that bring jobs back to the US and threatening to impose tariffs on those that do not.
Business leaders have scrambled to pay homage to the president, offering the US government stakes in their companies and even bestowing personal gifts on the president in a bid to avoid sanctions
Last week, US chip manufacturer Nvidia agreed for the US government to take 15pc of the company’s revenues generated in China as part of an agreement to restart exports to Beijing.
The unprecedented pact came after Mr Trump barred sales of Nvidia’s H20 technology in China earlier this year to boost his tit-for-tat trade war with Beijing, wiping billions of dollars from the $4tn company’s value in the process.
Tim Cook, the Apple chief executive, last week agreed to invest $100bn in American manufacturing after the president pledged to impose 100pc tariffs on foreign microchip imports.
The tech giant’s commitment to US manufacturing – as well as Mr Cook’s gift of a glass plaque with a 24-carat gold base – earned the company a reprieve from Mr Trump.
White House Creates Secret List of Biggest Corporate Enemies
Leigh Kimmins
Fri, August 15, 2025

Win McNamee / Getty Images
The Trump White House has quietly assembled a corporate loyalty scorecard that ranks 553 companies and trade associations by how fervently they backed the president’s One Big Beautiful Bill, Axios reports.
The internal list—reportedly known inside the West Wing as the “OB3” scorecard—categorizes organizations as strong, moderate, or low supporters based on a mix of public and private cheerleading.
Metrics include social media posts, press releases, paid ads, attendance at White House events, and video testimonials praising the legislation.
A senior official told Axios the ranking “helps us see who really goes out and helps vs. those who just come in and pay lip service,” describing it as a reality check when lobbyists from K Street call to reminisce about their “great” work passing the bill.
Fri, August 15, 2025
Win McNamee / Getty Images
The Trump White House has quietly assembled a corporate loyalty scorecard that ranks 553 companies and trade associations by how fervently they backed the president’s One Big Beautiful Bill, Axios reports.
The internal list—reportedly known inside the West Wing as the “OB3” scorecard—categorizes organizations as strong, moderate, or low supporters based on a mix of public and private cheerleading.
Metrics include social media posts, press releases, paid ads, attendance at White House events, and video testimonials praising the legislation.
A senior official told Axios the ranking “helps us see who really goes out and helps vs. those who just come in and pay lip service,” describing it as a reality check when lobbyists from K Street call to reminisce about their “great” work passing the bill.
Trump takes the stage during a reception for Republican members of the House of Representatives after passing the One Big Beautiful Bill Act. / Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images
The White House has already identified “good partners” whose enthusiasm earned them high marks: Uber, DoorDash, United Airlines, Delta Air Lines, AT&T, Cisco, Airlines for America, and the Steel Manufacturers Association.
Uber, for example, name-checked Trump in a celebratory message about his bill, in a May blog post.
“No Tax on Tips is now law. No Tax on Tips, first proposed by President Trump during his 2024 presidential campaign, is a proposal to change how tips are taxed,” it read.
“Now that this has become law, you won’t pay federal income taxes on your tips that are reported to the IRS on a 1099 form.”
The list is circulating among senior staff, while a separate public-facing tracker on the White House website logs “Trump Effect” investments in U.S. manufacturing, production, and innovation.
Uber is on the Trump administration list, presumably on a good footing. / SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images
According to the official, the document will expand to include support for other administration priorities, meaning companies can still raise their grades—if they boost their public advocacy.
“If groups/companies want to start advocating more now for the tax bill or additional administration priorities, we will take that into account,” the official said.

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