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Elizabeth Warren

Elizabeth Warren Says Companies That Settled With Trump May Have Committed Bribery

While the settlements likely don't meet the statutory definition of bribery, they're still inappropriate.

Joe Lancaster | 10.20.2025 12:30 PM

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Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D–Mass.) alongside a 50/50 split of the logos of Facebook and Paramount. | Illustration: Eddie Marshall | BONNIE CASH | UPI |Newscom
(Illustration: Eddie Marshall | BONNIE CASH | UPI |Newscom)

During his second term in office, several major media organizations have settled lawsuits brought by President Donald Trump. The lawsuits have little or no merit, and the settlements clearly seem like payoffs meant to hold off a vengeful president. Now Senate Democrats are investigating whether the settlements amount to bribery.

"We write seeking information on Google subsidiary YouTube's $22 million settlement with President Trump, and on how the decision may relate to regulatory issues pending with the Trump administration," began a letter last week from lawmakers—chief among them Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D–Mass.)—to Google CEO Sundar Pichai and YouTube CEO Neal Mohan.

In January 2021, YouTube suspended Trump's account after the January 6 Capitol riot; Twitter and Facebook did the same. Trump later sued all three companies, saying the suspensions constituted "illegal, shameful censorship." The lawsuits were frivolous on their face—private companies are free to decide whom to allow or exclude from their platforms—but all three companies settled once Trump reentered office. Last month, more than two years after it reinstated his account, YouTube agreed to pay $24.5 million to settle the lawsuit. The bulk of it went to Trump, which he said he would earmark for a new ballroom he is building at the White House.

The lawmakers wrote to Pichai and Mohan in August, when it appeared YouTube may settle. Google, they noted, faced a number of potential regulatory hurdles as well as labor and antitrust actions. "Google stands to benefit from how the federal government proceeds in these matters, and Google may settle this lawsuit in the hopes of securing outcomes favorable to the company," the letter warned. "Under the federal bribery statute, it is illegal to corruptly give anything of value to public officials with the intent to influence an official act." (In a brief two-page reply, Google noted "the Company's commitment to comply with both U.S. and non-U.S. laws and regulations" and clarified that talks were still ongoing.)

In last week's follow-up letter, Warren—along with Sens. Ron Wyden (D–Ore.), Bernie Sanders (I–Vt.), Richard Blumenthal (D–Ct.), and Jeff Merkeley (D–Ore.)—asked, in light of the settlement, to know more about the negotiations. Among other things, they asked whether Google and YouTube were "engaging the Trump administration in any way to secure favorable treatment in any pending legal or enforcement matters or potential future matters."

Google was not the only example.

During the 2024 election, Trump complained when CBS lightly edited a 60 Minutes interview with his opponent, then–Vice President Kamala Harris, by airing only part of her answer to a question in the primetime broadcast. In October 2024, he sued CBS and its parent company, Paramount, seeking $10 billion in damages—later increased to $20 billion—saying the minor edits caused "confusion and mental anguish" for him and for viewers. CBS called the lawsuit "completely without merit."

Legally, Trump had no leg to stand on: Even substantive edits to news broadcasts are fully within an outlet's discretion, according to the U.S. Supreme Court. CBS later released a transcript and raw footage of the interview, proving there was no substance to the controversy in the first place.

But in July 2025, Paramount agreed to pay $16 million to settle the lawsuit. This was better than what Trump had reportedly demanded—$25 million and an apology—but it was still a shameful outcome for one of the most prominent journalistic outlets in the country.

The decision likely stemmed, at least in part, from the fact that Paramount needed the Trump administration's approval to finalize an $8 billion merger with Skydance Media. The Federal Communications Commission approved the merger on July 24, just three weeks after Paramount agreed to settle the lawsuit and two days after Skydance pledged that as Paramount's new owner, it would install an "ombudsman" to "receive and evaluate any complaints of bias or other concerns involving CBS."

In a May letter, Warren and other Democratic lawmakers cautioned Paramount about settling Trump's lawsuit and acceding to his government's demands "in exchange for approval of its megamerger" with Skydance. "Under the federal bribery statute, it is illegal to corruptly give anything of value to public officials to influence an official act," they wrote. "If Paramount officials make these concessions in a quid pro quo arrangement to influence President Trump or other Administration officials, they may be breaking the law."

This was apparently not news to Paramount. All the way back in February, The Wall Street Journal's Jessica Tonkel reported the company was "wrestling" with how to settle the lawsuit, "and how it might do so without exposing executives to future legal threats, such as accusations of bribery."

The lawmakers also asked if Skydance made any sort of "side deal" with Trump, wherein the company agreed to certain concessions in exchange for merger approval. "The public deserves to know which White House officials met with Skydance executives, and if Skydance cut a side deal with the President in order to grease the skids for its merger approval," Warren, Sanders, and Wyden wrote in a letter last week.

The senators were not alone. After the merger, the nonprofit organization Free Speech for People "called on" the attorneys general of New York and California "to determine whether Trump, senior administration officials, and Trump's personal associates violated state laws and, if warranted, to bring criminal charges."

It's unlikely the bribery allegations will bear fruit. "An offer made merely to ingratiate or with a generalized hope of future official benefit is insufficient. Bribery law requires an unambiguous intent to influence a public official's action through money or something else of value," wrote John Keller, an attorney who previously headed the Department of Justice Public Integrity Section, in a post at Lawfare. "Without the requirement of an actual offer, every company or individual with any business pending before the federal government would be subject to a bribery charge for any commercial or personal dealings with Trump or his expansive network of businesses that appeared favorable to the president."

Legal or not, it's completely inappropriate for the sitting president to sue media companies he doesn't like and use the levers of government to force them to settle. While it may not meet the statutory definition of bribery, lawmakers are right to probe both the administration and the companies Trump has targeted.

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NEXT: Fate of Flight Attendant Who Accused Army Vet of Trafficking His Daughter Is Now With Virginia's Supreme Court

Joe Lancaster is an assistant editor at Reason.

Elizabeth WarrennewsDonald TrumpTrump AdministrationCrimePoliticsTelevisionSettlementsLawsuits
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  1. Chumby   6 hours ago

    Did the companies claim Cherokee heritage due to having high cheek bones?

    Log in to Reply
  2. Denys Picard   6 hours ago

    Maybe the better avenue would be a Coercion theory. One would have to look in details in Securities Law.

    Log in to Reply
    1. Bubba Jones   1 hour ago

      No. They were wearing short dresses. They were asking for it.

      Log in to Reply
  3. Incunabulum   6 hours ago

    No one really seemed to be all that bothered by this sort of thing when it was the Democrats and activist groups colluding to settle.

    Log in to Reply
    1. JesseAz (RIP CK)   5 hours ago

      Sue and settle became a national past time under Obama. Then Trump ended the practice in 2017. Then Biden resurrected it again.

      Oh. This is complaining about defamation. When it adds up to even half the Alex Jones suit that reason celebrated I'll care.

      Log in to Reply
      1. Mother's Lament   5 hours ago

        As always, that's (D)ifferent.

        Log in to Reply
        1. MollyGodiva   4 hours ago

          Of course it it is different. Obama did not use settlements to line his own pockets.

          Every time someone uses "(D)ifferent" you know it is a dumb shit MAGA trying to justify something Trump is doing by comparing it to something moderately related that the Ds did. It is about as dishonest as it gets.

          Log in to Reply
          1. InsaneTrollLogic (smarter than The Average Dude)   4 hours ago

            Bullshit. It’s pointing out the (D)ouble standard you and other asshole leftists have with regards to when a Democrat does something and a Republican (or independent) does the exact same thing.

            Log in to Reply
            1. MollyGodiva   3 hours ago

              When did the Ds do this?

              Log in to Reply
              1. InsaneTrollLogic (smarter than The Average Dude)   52 minutes ago

                You might want to pay attention instead of wallowing in retardity.

                Log in to Reply
          2. Purple Martin   2 hours ago

            Yup. I won't even edit this example (I wrote here a while back), in response to something that, by context, seems to an Obama-related issue greybox and you were referring to...

            I looked and looked, and am unable to locate exactly where Professor Blackman noted President Obama personally ordered any U.S. Government contract with Baker Hostetler and firms doing business with it be rescinded, and any security clearances of any of their employees, revoked.

            Interesting illustration of part of the problem, which is a MAGA mindset that seems inherently unable to consistently differentiate between different things that have at least some surface similarity.

            As many learned from Sesame Street at an early age:
            One of these things is not like the others…all of these things are not the same. "

            For some people that takes longer. But come on, Josh, you can do it!

            Log in to Reply
            1. JesseAz (RIP CK)   2 hours ago

              So you are bragging about making an argument from ignorance? Always weird seeing this from the retard left. "I muted someone but here's an argument against what I didnt read!"

              Log in to Reply
          3. JesseAz (RIP CK)   2 hours ago

            Lol.

            He used it to line the pockets of his campaign team, democrats, activist groups, etc. Theta had a surprisingly high number of book and speech purchases from the obamas.

            Retard.

            Log in to Reply
    2. Hickamore   2 hours ago

      Trump brought the lawsuits meritless lawsuits against the media companies. They settled to gain favor with Trump once he regained power. You don't seem to grasp what bribery is.

      Log in to Reply
      1. JesseAz (RIP CK)   2 hours ago

        Whats meritless?

        Log in to Reply
  4. Kemuel   5 hours ago

    Could the lawmakers' letter to YouTube threatening bribery charges if they settled the lawsuit with Trump be considered extortion?

    Log in to Reply
    1. MollyGodiva   4 hours ago

      Warning people that committing criminal acts might lead to criminal penalties is normal.

      Log in to Reply
      1. InsaneTrollLogic (smarter than The Average Dude)   4 hours ago

        Put that PhD in Retardology to use there, Dr. Retard.

        Log in to Reply
      2. JesseAz (RIP CK)   2 hours ago

        Finally you admit going after comey, Leticia, and others is legitimate.

        Log in to Reply
    2. Chumby   2 hours ago

      Nobody is above the law.

      Liz Wolfe: The Good
      Liz Nolan Brown: The Bad
      Liz Warren: The Fugly

      Log in to Reply
    3. Hickamore   2 hours ago

      No. The Senators are not demanding money or favors from the media companies.

      Log in to Reply
  5. Mother's Lament   5 hours ago

    "The lawsuits have little or no merit, and the settlements clearly seem like payoffs meant to hold off a vengeful president"

    Golly, Lancaster seems to be a little nervous. Every single one of those lawsuits have had merit. The libel was made by very dishonest people who thought that the Democrats would fix things for them. Maybe if Lancaster and Sullum quit with all the libel because orangemanbad, they wouldn't have to be frightened.

    Log in to Reply
    1. Social Justice is neither   4 hours ago

      You gotta love how it never crosses Joe's chickpea sized brain that maybe they actually did something wrong.

      Log in to Reply
      1. DesigNate   3 hours ago

        It never does for our totally not democrat lite posters and “journalists”.

        Log in to Reply
    2. Hickamore   2 hours ago

      "Every single one of those lawsuits [there were two] had merit." Let me guess: you are not a lawyer and not competent to speak on the law of defamation. So STFU about it.

      Log in to Reply
  6. MollyGodiva   4 hours ago

    Of course it is bribery. Bribery laundering. Instead of getting a bribe directly, you file a baseless lawsuit, and then settle for the money would have gotten if the bribery was direct. But still bribery.

    Log in to Reply
    1. InsaneTrollLogic (smarter than The Average Dude)   4 hours ago

      Money laundering, like say funneling funds through USAID to an NGO that keeps 95% of the money here while sending less than 5% to its supposed destination while giving its employees outrageous salaries and donating that money directly into the coffers of the DNC?

      Log in to Reply
    2. Bertram Guilfoyle   3 hours ago

      What about speaking fees?

      Log in to Reply
      1. InsaneTrollLogic (smarter than The Average Dude)   3 hours ago

        Those are (D)ifferent when (D)one by the right people.

        Log in to Reply
        1. MollyGodiva   2 hours ago

          Do Republicans not take speakers fees? Speakers fees are stupid not because the speaker takes them, but that companies are dumb enough to pay them.

          Log in to Reply
          1. InsaneTrollLogic (smarter than The Average Dude)   48 minutes ago

            Are you always this retarded, or did you just stay at a Knights Inn last night?

            Log in to Reply
  7. TJJ2000   3 hours ago

    LOL... The only reason Democrats are making an issue out of this is because their Government censorship empire is getting shut-down. The whole reason behind all their hatred of Trump specifically. He's shutting down (i.e. "hollowing") out our [Na]tional So[zi]alist Empire - openly stated in the DNC platform.

    Log in to Reply
  8. Ben of Houston   3 hours ago

    The issue I have is that if we took the advice presented here, this would mean the executive or candidates would have no recourse for libel. And we have numerous examples of pretty darn clear libel.

    The claim that the Harris interview was "lightly edited" is so fallacious that I cannot trust any other claim in this article. Entire sections were reordered, even putting different answers to different questions. If the Harris editing is not election interference, then news stations cannot commit election interference.

    But this isn't about merit. These didn't get to the courtroom. It's about the filings themselves. Do we just say these laws do not exist and the president is unable to perform any civil action? That he's a wolf's head and cannot respond even to outright libelous actions and election interference? That's absurd on its face.

    Log in to Reply
  9. Marshal   3 hours ago

    The lawsuits were frivolous on their face—private companies are free to decide whom to allow or exclude from their platforms—

    It's revealing Joe doesn't mention the government program pressuring businesses to censor including directing them to censor specific accounts. Why would such obviously relevant information be omitted?

    During the 2024 election, Trump complained when CBS lightly edited a 60 Minutes interview with his opponent, then–Vice President Kamala Harris,

    Compare this to the left's assertion Project Veritas edited the Planned Parenthood video in which they admit to selling body parts. For years the left claimed this was "edited" as if that negated the obvious admissions of criminal acts. Literally never has a single Reasoner disputed that characterization in any way let alone specifically argue it was 'lightly" edited to indicate that nothing important was omitted.

    They seem to believe any characterization from left to right is acceptable, but their standards become vastly more exacting when the right criticizes the left. This is because they know the media center of power is overwhemingly far left and their operational practice is to appease that power.

    Log in to Reply
  10. Thoritsu   2 hours ago

    What does she say about companies that settled with Biden or ... her?

    She only knows how this goes because she is SOOO guilty of exactly the same.

    Would be nice if Reason could pull their head out of their ass and discuss this outside their TDS.

    Log in to Reply
  11. smbergeron@gmail.com   12 minutes ago

    Why not take away all those levers he’s pulling?

    Oh, that’s right….the senators who are outraged want those levers to be available when someone they like is there to pull them….

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