Increasing Corporate Funding and Spending for Candidates Leading up to the 2026 Elections

That decision has enabled corporations and groups including super political action committees (PACs) to spend unlimited money on elections, and in the 2026 cycle alone, they have already spent $517 million—“a figure sure to soar as the November general election approaches,” said Public Citizen.

In 2024, the crypto sector pioneered the playbook corporations are using this year—“prioritizing corporate priorities over parties or candidates and using their financial power to discipline sitting lawmakers and candidates.”

PACs including the pro-AI Leading the Future and the sports betting industry-backed Win for America PAC are some of the top recipients of the corporate case, taking $50.1 million and $43 million, respectively.

The report comes two weeks after campaigners in Montana announced they had collected signatures that far exceeded the minimum requirement to force a statewide vote on a ballot measure that, if passed, would block corporations from pouring money into elections.

“Time and time again, Americans have demonstrated they want elected officials who are willing to stand up for them against the powerful and predatory corporations that attempt to dominate our daily lives,” reads the Public Citizen report. “Lawmakers can demonstrate their fearlessness and independence from corporate influence by passing legislation that empowers the public while reducing the influence of Big Business demands to prioritize profit-maximization over Americans’ health, safety, and democracy.”

The group called on Congress to pass the “Abolish Super PACs Act, the DISCLOSE Act, and, ultimately, a constitutional amendment to overturn Citizens United.”

The intense escalation of corporate spending we are now seeing,” concludes the report, “shows that it is well past time for salvaging American democracy to be treated with the urgency that it deserves.”