Mastercard — Corporate Donor Profile
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Mastercard — Corporate Donor Profile

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Mastercard — Corporate Donor Profile

Overview

Mastercard Incorporated (NYSE: MA) is one of two dominant global payment networks (alongside Visa), processing billions of transactions annually across more than 210 countries. Headquartered in Purchase, New York, Mastercard generates revenue primarily through interchange (“swipe”) fees charged on every transaction processed through its network. Together with Visa, Mastercard controls approximately 85% of the U.S. credit card processing market.

This profile documents Mastercard’s Freedom 250 sponsorship in the context of two specific Trump-endorsed threats to its core business model: (1) a proposed 10% cap on credit card interest rates, and (2) the Credit Card Competition Act (CCCA), which would break the Visa-Mastercard duopoly by requiring banks to enable routing through competing networks. As of June 2026, President Trump has publicly endorsed both measures — and neither has been enacted. Popular Information reported: “For Mastercard, the access to Trump provided by sponsoring Freedom 250 could be extraordinarily valuable.”

Basis for Inclusion

Subject Classification: Public Corporation with documented political spending while facing government-endorsed regulatory threats to its core business that have not materialized into action.

Basis for inclusion:

  • Documented sponsor of Freedom 250, the public-private partnership funding Trump’s Fourth of July and semiquincentennial events. Sponsor packages at the $1M+ “Patriot” level include private receptions with the president (PolitiFact, June 2026; Impactivize; Senator Schiff probe).
  • President Trump publicly endorsed a 10% credit card interest rate cap in January 2026 — a direct threat to Mastercard’s business model (Consumer Finance Monitor, January 21, 2026).
  • President Trump publicly endorsed the Credit Card Competition Act in January 2026, calling interchange fees an “out of control ripoff” (Truth Social; Senator Marshall press release).
  • Neither measure has been enacted or advanced past committee as of June 2026.
  • $5.71 million in federal lobbying expenditures in 2025, with disclosed lobbying issues including “interchange, cost of acceptance, debit interchange price controls, and routing mandates for credit cards” (OpenSecrets; Quiver Quantitative).
  • Mastercard has formally lobbied against the Credit Card Competition Act, writing to Congress that it would “remove consumer choice, erode security, eliminate rewards and prevent small businesses from investing in their future” (PYMNTS, September 2023).

What is NOT the basis for inclusion:

  • Routine payment processing operations.
  • Individual employee political contributions.
  • Mastercard’s international operations unrelated to U.S. government policy.
  • Mastercard’s stock performance.

Political Spending and Access

Freedom 250 Sponsorship

Mastercard is listed as a corporate sponsor of Freedom 250. The company appears on the Freedom 250 website among other sponsors including ExxonMobil, Deloitte, Palantir, UnitedHealth Group, and United Airlines.

Popular Information, which obtained internal Freedom 250 documents, reported: “Mastercard, meanwhile, faces a threat to its core business after Trump proposed a 10% cap on credit card interest rates. Although there were reports that Trump would issue an executive order imposing the restriction, he has not done so. Trump also has endorsed legislation that would bring more competition to the lucrative credit card processing fee industry. Thus far, that legislation has not advanced. All of this means that, for Mastercard, the access to Trump provided by sponsoring Freedom 250 could be extraordinarily valuable.”

Mastercard has not responded to press inquiries about its Freedom 250 sponsorship (Impactivize, May 2026).

Source: Popular Information, “Major corporations bankroll ‘America First’ propaganda”; PolitiFact, June 1, 2026; Impactivize, May 2026.

Lobbying Expenditures

Year Amount
2024 $5,210,000
2025 $5,710,000

Mastercard’s Q1 2025 lobbying disclosure explicitly listed the following issues: “Issues related to interchange, cost of acceptance, debit interchange price controls, and routing mandates for credit cards; Issues related to procurement reform; Issues related to artificial intelligence and payment security; Issues related to open banking. Issues related to cybersecurity. Issues related to digital trade. Issues related to tax.”

Mastercard retains multiple lobbying firms including Tower 19 ($180,000 in 2025), Lincoln Park Group ($80,000), and Holland & Knight ($10,000).

Source: OpenSecrets, MasterCard Inc Lobbying Profile, 2024–2025; Quiver Quantitative, Q1 2025 disclosure.

PAC Contributions

The Mastercard International Inc. Employee PAC raised $517,207 and spent $489,578 in the 2023–2024 election cycle. The PAC contributed $255,000 to federal candidates — 50.59% to Republicans, 48.24% to Democrats. Recipients included members of both the House Financial Services Committee and the Senate Banking Committee — the committees with jurisdiction over credit card regulation.

Source: OpenSecrets, PAC Profile: MasterCard Inc, 2023–2024.

Regulatory Threats to Mastercard’s Core Business

Threat 1: Credit Card Interest Rate Cap

Timeline:

Date Event
January 12, 2026 President Trump posts on Truth Social calling for a 10% cap on credit card interest rates
January 21, 2026 Trump announces support at World Economic Forum in Davos: “I’m asking Congress to cap credit card interest rates at 10% for one year”
February 4, 2025 S.381 (10 Percent Credit Card Interest Rate Cap Act) introduced by Senators Sanders and Hawley — bill would cap rates for five years
February 2026 55+ national organizations send letter to Congress supporting the cap, estimated to save families $100 billion annually
As of June 2026 Bill remains in committee. No floor vote scheduled. No executive order issued.

Trump stated at Davos: “The profit margin for credit card companies now exceeds 50%. And they charge Americans interest rates of 28%, 30%, 31%, 32%… So to help our citizens recover from the Biden disaster… I’m asking Congress to cap credit card interest rates at 10% for one year.”

Following Trump’s endorsement, reports emerged that administration officials explored voluntary industry alternatives — specifically, banks offering “Trump Cards” with a one-year 10% rate cap — rather than legislative action.

Status as of June 2026: The legislation has not advanced. No executive order has been issued. GovTrack assigns the bill a 9% chance of enactment.

Source: Consumer Finance Monitor, January 21, 2026; Congress.gov, S.381; GovTrack; Protect Borrowers, February 6, 2026.

Threat 2: Credit Card Competition Act

Timeline:

Date Event
2022 Credit Card Competition Act first introduced by Senators Durbin and Marshall
September 2023 Mastercard writes formal opposition letter to Congress, calling the bill harmful to consumers
2024 Effort to attach CCCA to the Genius Act fails; bill considered politically dead
January 2026 Trump endorses the CCCA on Truth Social, calling swipe fees “out of control”
January 2026 Bill reintroduced with bipartisan support (Senators Marshall/Durbin; Reps. Gooden/Lofgren)
As of June 2026 Bill remains in committee. Sponsors exploring attachment to larger legislative vehicles.

The CCCA would require banks with over $100 billion in assets to enable at least two unaffiliated card networks on credit cards — with at least one network other than Visa or Mastercard. Proponents argue this would introduce competition that lowers interchange fees. Mastercard and Visa argue it would undermine security, eliminate rewards programs, and harm consumers.

Trump’s endorsement, according to Digital Transactions, “breathes new life into the bill” and “all but assures that it will get a vote and significantly increases the chances of it passing and becoming law.” However, as of June 2026, it has not received a floor vote.

Source: Senator Marshall press release, January 2026; Rep. Gooden press release, January 2026; Congress.gov, S.3623; Digital Transactions; Lexology analysis; PYMNTS, September 2023.

The Pattern: Threats Endorsed But Not Enacted

The factual record shows:

  1. Trump publicly endorsed a 10% interest rate cap — Mastercard’s core business model depends on high interest rates generating transaction volume.
  2. Trump publicly endorsed the Credit Card Competition Act — which would break the Visa-Mastercard duopoly.
  3. Mastercard became a Freedom 250 sponsor, providing the company with private access to the president.
  4. As of June 2026, neither threat has materialized into law or executive action.
  5. The interest rate cap has been softened from legislation to exploration of voluntary “Trump Card” alternatives.
  6. The CCCA has not received a floor vote despite the presidential endorsement.

International Sanctions Enforcement Role

Mastercard plays a significant role in international sanctions enforcement, as its network enables or restricts transactions in sanctioned jurisdictions. The company disconnected Russian financial institutions from its network following the 2022 invasion of Ukraine. Decisions about sanctions compliance and network access involve ongoing coordination with the U.S. Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC).

Federal Contracts

Mastercard subsidiary Mastercard Government Services holds contracts with U.S. government agencies for payment processing, disbursement services, and prepaid card programs. The company’s technology is used in government payment systems including certain benefits disbursement programs.

Conflict of Interest Analysis

The factual record presents a specific pattern:

  1. President Trump publicly endorsed two regulatory measures that directly threaten Mastercard’s core business model — a credit card interest rate cap and the Credit Card Competition Act.
  2. Mastercard became a Freedom 250 sponsor — an entity offering private access to the president for $1M+ donors.
  3. Despite presidential endorsement, neither measure has advanced past committee as of June 2026.
  4. The interest rate cap proposal has been diluted from legislation to voluntary “Trump Card” alternatives.
  5. Mastercard spent $5.71 million on lobbying in 2025, with interchange fees and routing mandates as disclosed lobbying issues.

Popular Information stated directly: “For Mastercard, the access to Trump provided by sponsoring Freedom 250 could be extraordinarily valuable.”

Whether the Freedom 250 sponsorship influenced the non-advancement of these measures cannot be determined from public records. What can be documented is the temporal relationship between the threats, the sponsorship, and the legislative inaction.

Mastercard’s Risk Committee Context

Mastercard’s Board Risk Committee is chaired by Youngme Moon, a professor at Harvard Business School. This is notable because the Trump administration has “relentlessly attacked Harvard, filed multiple lawsuits to cancel funding and partner programs” (Impactivize). The intersection between Mastercard’s risk assessment function and the administration’s institutional hostility toward Harvard creates an additional dimension to the company’s political calculus.

For Trump Supporters: Questions Worth Considering

  1. President Trump called interchange fees an “out of control ripoff” in January 2026. Why has nothing happened since?
  2. If Mastercard is paying for private access to the president while the president’s own endorsed legislation threatens Mastercard’s profits — what is being purchased?
  3. The average American family pays nearly $1,200 per year in swipe fees. Should the company collecting those fees have private receptions with the president?
  4. Trump endorsed both the interest rate cap and the CCCA. Both remain stalled. Is this a coincidence or a pattern?
  5. If a Democratic president endorsed legislation threatening a company, and that company then sponsored the president’s private fundraiser, and the legislation stalled — would that be acceptable?

Investigative Trails

  • Freedom 250 donor tier documents: confirm Mastercard’s specific sponsorship level
  • Congressional lobbying disclosures: track Mastercard’s specific lobbying on CCCA and interest rate cap
  • Senate Banking Committee records: mark-up or hearing scheduling for S.381 and CCCA
  • White House visitor logs: Mastercard executive meetings with administration officials
  • Treasury/OFAC coordination: Mastercard’s role in sanctions implementation decisions
  • Federal procurement records: Mastercard Government Services contracts via USAspending.gov
  • Popular Information internal documents: Freedom 250 “Events Toolkit” revealing political content

Sources

  1. Popular Information, “Major corporations bankroll ‘America First’ propaganda,” 2026. https://popular.info/p/major-corporations-bankroll-america
  2. Impactivize, “UPDATE: Corporate Sponsors of Trump’s Freedom 250,” May 2026. https://www.impactivize.org/impactivizereporting/mastercard-sponsors-trumps-freedom-250-usa-birthday-despite-backlash-risk/
  3. PolitiFact, “Trump’s Freedom 250 concert on the National Mall: What happened? What’s next?” June 1, 2026. https://www.politifact.com/article/2026/jun/01/cancel-250-concert-national-mall-trump/
  4. Consumer Finance Monitor, “Trump announces support for legislation to cap credit card interest rates at 10% per annum for one year,” January 21, 2026. https://www.consumerfinancemonitor.com/2026/01/21/trump-announces-support-for-legislation-to-cap-credit-card-interest-rates-at-10-per-annum-for-one-year/
  5. Senator Marshall, “Marshall, Durbin Reintroduce Credit Card Competition Act Backed by President Trump,” January 2026. https://www.marshall.senate.gov/newsroom/press-releases/marshall-durbin-reintroduce-credit-card-competition-act-backed-by-president-trump/
  6. Rep. Gooden, “Gooden Reintroduces Trump-Endorsed Credit Card Competition Act,” January 2026. https://gooden.house.gov/2026/1/gooden-reintroduces-trump-endorsed-credit-card-competition-act
  7. Digital Transactions, “The CCCA Gets New Life Thanks to a Presidential Endorsement,” January 2026. https://www.digitaltransactions.net/the-ccca-gets-new-life-thanks-to-a-presidential-endorsement/
  8. Congress.gov, S.381 — 10 Percent Credit Card Interest Rate Cap Act, introduced February 4, 2025. https://www.congress.gov/bill/119th-congress/senate-bill/381
  9. Congress.gov, S.3623 — Credit Card Competition Act of 2026. https://www.congress.gov/bill/119th-congress/senate-bill/3623/text/is
  10. Lexology, “Credit Card Competition Act of 2026: Implications for Card Issuers, Payment Networks, and Consumers,” 2026. https://www.lexology.com/library/detail.aspx?g=62cdc484-fb1a-4bb8-a088-b206c0914ef1
  11. PYMNTS, “Mastercard Lay Out Opposition to Credit Card Competition Act,” September 2023. https://www.pymnts.com/credit-cards/2023/mastercard-outlines-opposition-to-credit-card-competition-act/
  12. Protect Borrowers, “Historic Coalition… Call On Congress to Advance Legislation Capping Credit Card Interest Rates,” February 6, 2026. https://protectborrowers.org/credit-card-interest-rate-cap-coalition-letter-release/
  13. Senator Hawley, “Hawley Urges Congress to Pass His Legislation to Cap Credit Card Rates Following Trump Statement,” January 12, 2026. https://www.hawley.senate.gov/hawley-urges-congress-to-pass-his-legislation-to-cap-credit-card-rates-following-trump-statement/
  14. OpenSecrets, “Finance/Credit Companies Lobbying Profile,” 2024. https://www.opensecrets.org/federal-lobbying/industries/summary?cycle=2024&id=F06
  15. OpenSecrets, “MasterCard Inc Hired Firms,” 2025. https://www.opensecrets.org/federal-lobbying/clients/hired-firms?cycle=2025&id=D000022099
  16. OpenSecrets, “PAC Profile: MasterCard Inc,” 2023–2024. https://www.opensecrets.org/political-action-committees-pacs/mastercard-inc/C00410274/summary/2024
  17. Quiver Quantitative, “Lobbying Update: $70,000 of MASTERCARD lobbying was just disclosed,” Q1 2025. https://www.quiverquant.com/news/Lobbying+Update%3A+%2470%2C000+of+MASTERCARD+lobbying+was+just+disclosed
  18. Senator Schiff, “Probe into New Private Entity Offering Millionaire Trump Donors Access,” February 2026. https://www.schiff.senate.gov/news/press-releases/news-senator-schiff-colleagues-launch-probe-into-new-private-entity-offering-millionaire-trump-donors-access-to-white-house-semiquincentennial-events/
  19. GovTrack, “S.381: 10 Percent Credit Card Interest Rate Cap Act,” 119th Congress. https://www.govtrack.us/congress/bills/119/s381
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