Jamie Dimon, the CEO of JPMorgan Chase, on Wednesday defined why the nation’s largest financial institution hasn’t — and gained’t — be donating to the development of President Donald Trump’s lavish new $300 million White Home ballroom.
A number of main companies, together with Amazon, Apple, Coinbase, Google, Microsoft and T-Cellular, have contributed towards the controversial challenge, which changed the East Wing that was razed final month. See extra donors right here.
However JPMorgan Chase isn’t amongst them.
“We have now a problem, OK?” Dimon advised CNN’s Erin Burnett. “Which is something we do, since we do quite a lot of contracts with governments right here and around the globe, we have now to be very cautious how something is perceived — and likewise how the subsequent DOJ goes to cope with it.”
“So we’re fairly acutely aware of the danger we bear by doing something that appears something like shopping for favors or something like that,” he continued. “We even have insurance policies that we don’t do sure issues as a result of it simply makes it simpler for us.”
The financial institution has beforehand supported presidential inaugurations, stated Dimon, which is one thing “quite a lot of firms did,” he defined. However this case is completely different, given the optics, he added. It gave $1 million to Trump’s second-term inauguration fund, however nothing to Joe Biden’s in 2021.
Dimon, whose internet value Forbes estimates at $2.7 billion, reportedly privately supported Democratic nominee Kamala Harris within the 2024 election, though he stopped in need of making a public endorsement.
