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Meet the Billionaires Who Benefit From Trump’s Draconian Policies

A new report reveals the usual suspects — and other corporate executives quietly enriching themselves on Trump’s authoritarianism.

It may come as little surprise that President Donald Trump’s administration is benefitting the wealthy. Trump’s plan to fund $5 trillion in tax cuts for corporations and the uber-rich relies on cutting hundreds of billions of dollars in services for working people, including Medicaid. 

But just how billionaires and corporate oligarchs stand to benefit from Trump’s policies — namely his deportation and surveillance regime — is outlined in detail in a new report from the Center for Popular Democracy in Action, the campaign arm of the nonprofit advocacy group.

The usual characters won’t shock anyone: major Trump campaign donors like Elon Musk (whose recent rift with Trump may not last), Amazon founder and Washington Post owner Jeff Bezos, or Palantir co-founder Peter Thiel. Trump wants to deregulate sectors from artificial intelligence to the environment and labor, and cut corporate taxes for Bezos and other billionaires. But other corporate executives are already quietly enriching themselves on Trump’s policies.

“Trump’s ‘oligarchs’ are billionaires who are attempting to control political decisions in order to increase their wealth,” the report said.

Take private prison executive and millionaire George Zoley, an immigrant from Greece who founded GEO Group, the nation’s biggest private prison and immigrant detention company. During an earnings call in November, Zoley, a registered Republican, said Trump’s policies presented an “unprecedented opportunity” for the company to double its services. The company has also massively expanded its work in surveillance technology to assist in deportations. 

Zoley’s comments were prescient. GEO Group has doubled its stock value since Trump’s election. The company claims to be the largest contractor for Immigration and Customs Enforcement and was awarded a $1 billion contract by ICE in February to open the largest ICE detention center on the East Coast. The company runs the Louisiana immigration detention center where Mahmoud Khalil is currently being held. GEO Group is also poised to reap profits after Congress passed the Laken Riley Act. The company has received $9 million in state and local subsidies over the last 17 years. GEO Group did not respond to a request for comment.

Akela Lacy is a Politics Reporter at The Intercept. She was previously The Intercept’s inaugural Ady Barkan Reporting Fellow; prior to that, she was a Politics Fellow in the D.C. Bureau. She has also worked at Politico, covering breaking news and immigration. She produced Politico’s flagship newsletter, Playbook, and co-authored the afternoon newsletter, Playbook PM. Prior to that, Lacy worked in international reporting at the Pulitzer Center. She graduated from the College of William and Mary with a B.A. in sociology and Italian. She is based in New York.

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