President-elect Trump’s inaugural fund has seen a flurry of contributions from big-name companies in recent weeks. The inauguration will occur Monday.
Google is following other tech giants in supporting an administration that will shape the company’s historic antitrust case.
Google and Boeing have each given $1 million to President-elect Trump’s inaugural committee, joining a growing list of major corporations supporting the Jan. 20 event. “Google is pleased to support the 2025 inauguration,
Google donated $285,000 to Trump's first inauguration in 2017.
Google (GOOGL) is the latest technology giant to officially make a major donation to the group planning President-elect Donald Trump’s inauguration, which is less than two weeks away.
Tech giant Google is the latest company to donate $1 million to President-elect Donald Trump ’s inaugural fund, following in the footsteps of other major corporations such as Amazon, Meta, Uber and OpenAI. The company donated to Trump’s inaugural fund on Monday, according to CNBC.
Google donated $1 million to President-elect Donald Trump' s inauguration fund, becoming the latest major tech company to try and curry some goodwill with the incoming administration.
Search giant has joined the host of tech tycoons pledging financial support to the president-elect's inauguration fund.
Google (GOOGL) is donating $1M to President-elect Donald Trump’s inauguration fund, CNBC’s Ashley Capoot reports. Other major tech companies
The internal OB rule for hole No. 13 was, in fact, listed at the bottom of the rules sheet, which the official showed to Bhatia. The lefthander had to replay his shot from the trees, following a penalty stroke, and played up the 13 th fairway. He then hit a fairway metal to 10 feet but two-putted for double bogey.
“Google is pleased to support the 2025 inauguration with a livestream on YouTube and a direct link on our homepage. We’re also donating to the inaugural committee,” the global head of government affairs and public policy, Karan Bhatia, told CNBC in a ...
Exchanges that appear authentic tend to drive more engagement than ‘softball’ ones that politicians may prefer, researchers found.