Tuesday, June 2, 2026

The Corporate Capture of America: How Monopoly Power Bought the Republic

 By Staff

There is no longer any serious debate about whether corporate power has captured the American government. The debate is only about whether anything can be done before the patient dies on the table.

Federal lobbying spending shattered $5.24 billion in 2025 a 17% year over year jump and the largest single year increase ever recorded. That's not persuasion. That's not civic participation. That's a protection racket dressed in a suit, and the American people are the ones getting shaken down.

The pharmaceutical industry alone has spent over $6.1 billion on federal lobbying since 1999. And as one industry insider put it bluntly: Since 1950, the pharmaceutical companies' lobby has been the most powerful. They have won almost every issue.

They win. You lose. That's the design.

The numbers are staggering, but raw spending only tells part of the story. Here's the mechanism: The Lobbying Industrial Complex

Healthcare

$743.9 million

Drug pricing carve outs, PBM opacity, patent extensions

Finance/Insurance/Real Estate

$636.4 million

Deregulation, interest rate influence, bailout architecture

Defense

Billions via NDAA lobbying

Perpetual war funding, no bid contracts

Oil & Gas

Among top sectors

Subsidies, drilling permits, climate regulation kills

Tech

Surging

AI regulation capture, antitrust immunity, Section 230

The top lobbying firms Brownstein Hyatt Farber Schreck at $73.8 million and Ballard Partners at $81.7 million in 2025 alone aren't just influencing legislation. They're writing it. Literally. Staffers on the Hill will tell you off the record that major bills arrive per-drafted by K Street lawyers, and the legislators are there to hold press conferences.

This is where the corruption becomes undeniable.

The revolving door between regulatory agencies and the industries they're supposed to regulate isn't a bug it's the primary feature of modern governance. Research examining 420,153 individuals in top corporate positions at 12,869 firms found that more than half of those firms employ someone who came directly from an executive branch regulatory agency.

The pattern is consistent across every sector:

FDA officials approve drugs, then take seven figure jobs at the pharmaceutical companies whose products they green lit

SEC enforcement lawyers negotiate fraud settlements, then join the banks they were investigating as compliance officers

Patent Office examiners grant significantly more patents to firms that later hire them and those patents are measurably lower quality, receiving about 25% fewer citations

Defense Department procurement officers sign contracts, then walk through the revolving door to become consultants for the contractors they just enriched

This isn't theoretical. Studies confirm that firms receive more procurement contracts after hiring former regulators who left their agencies within two years. The contracts are more likely to be renegotiated, driving costs up for taxpayers.

The academic economists frame this delicately: Regulatory capture requires no explicit agreements at all. Industry norms are sufficient simply following the principle that one should not bite the hand that feeds it, so to speak, will suffice.

Translation: nobody has to say the quiet part out loud. Everyone just knows how the game works.

The 2010 Citizens United ruling didn't create corporate political power but it legalized its unlimited exercise.

By a 5-4 vote, the Supreme Court declared that corporate political spending is protected speech under the First Amendment, and that independent expenditures do not give rise to corruption or the appearance of corruption.

That last claim has aged like milk in the sun.

In the 2024 election, just 10 individual mega donors accounted for roughly 44%, $481 million of all money raised to support the Trump campaign. The top 10 donors supporting the Democratic candidate accounted for nearly 8% of her total. This is not democracy. This is plutocracy with extra steps.

The FEC the agency supposedly enforcing campaign finance law has been so thoroughly captured that it has effectively eliminated most restrictions on campaigns' ability to outsource core voter outreach to super PACs. The watchdog has been defanged, declawed, and trained to roll over.

Corporate concentration in America has been rising for 100 years not decades, a full century. Research from the University of Chicago documents that the asset share and sales share of top businesses has increased persistently across every sector:

Manufacturing and mining: concentration surged before the 1970s

Services, retail, and wholesale: concentration exploded after the 1970s

75% of all U.S. industries have seen increased concentration since the late 1990s

The number of publicly traded firms has declined by nearly 50% since the 1996 peak

The average firm is roughly three times larger in real terms than it was 20 years ago

When a handful of firms control an entire industry, they don't just control prices they control the regulatory apparatus, the supply chains, the labor market, and ultimately the political system itself.

In concentrated markets, corporations become monopolies single buyers of labor and suppress wages. They become monopolies and drive up consumer prices. They choke out small businesses and hollow out rural communities. And they accumulate enough surplus profit to buy politicians in bulk.

No industry illustrates corporate capture better than Big Pharma.

The pharmaceutical and health products industry has been the top lobbying spender every single year since 1999. That's a quarter-century of uninterrupted dominance. They've spent over $6.1 billion just on federal lobbying in that period and that doesn't count campaign contributions, dark money, astroturf patient advocacy groups, or the funding of academic research that conveniently supports their pricing models.

What did they buy?

No Medicare drug price negotiation until a weak version finally passed decades after every other developed nation implemented it.

Patent thickets and ever greening that extend monopolies decades past original patent expiry

Ban on drug importation from Canada and other countries where identical medications cost a fraction of the U.S. price.

PBM opacity that lets pharmacy benefit managers the middlemen they often own or influence extract billions in hidden rebates.

Liability shields that make it nearly impossible to sue for vaccine injuries or defective drugs.

The revolving door here is particularly egregious. FDA commissioners, NIH directors, and CMS administrators cycle between government service and pharmaceutical executive suites with the regularity of a metronome.

The Sherman Act (1890), the Clayton Act (1914), and the FTC Act were designed precisely to prevent what's happening now. So why didn't they work?

Because the courts were captured first.

Starting in the 1980s, the consumer welfare standard an economic theory championed by Robert Bork replaced the traditional understanding of antitrust law. Under this standard, mergers and monopolistic practices are only illegal if they can be proven to raise consumer prices in the short term. Worker harm, supplier exploitation, political power concentration, community destruction, and long-term innovation suppression? Irrelevant under the law.

This was a deliberate intellectual coup. It gave judges and regulators an excuse to approve virtually any merger, and they did. The number of antitrust cases filed plummeted. Merger challenges became rare. The FTC and DOJ Antitrust Division became parking lots for corporate lawyers doing a brief tour of "public service" before cashing in.

Even the Biden administration's much hyped antitrust revival Lina Khan at the FTC, Jonathan Kanter at the DOJ produced more press releases than structural change. The fundamental legal framework remains intact, and the courts remain hostile.

The solutions exist. They're not mysterious. They require political will that the current system is designed to prevent.

1. Enforce Existing Antitrust Law Aggressively

The Sherman Act already makes monopolization illegal. Use it. Break up Amazon into separate retail, cloud, and logistics companies. Split Google's search, advertising, and YouTube businesses. Unbundle Meta's Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp. Force the healthcare conglomerates to divest.

The legal authority exists. What's missing is the spine.

2. Ban the Revolving Door

A minimum five year cooling off period before any regulator can work for an industry they oversaw. No exceptions. No waivers. No consulting loopholes. Violations result in forfeiture of all compensation and criminal penalties.

The research shows that even a conditional ban where regulators can only take industry jobs if their regulatory record was unfavorable to that industry would dramatically reduce capture incentives.

3. Overturn Citizens United

A constitutional amendment establishing that: Corporations are not people. Money is not speech.

Congress and the states may regulate campaign finance without First Amendment constraint.

Twenty two states and hundreds of municipalities have already passed resolutions supporting such an amendment. The public overwhelmingly supports it. Only the bought off political class stands in opposition.

4. Public Financing of Elections

If campaigns are publicly funded with strict spending limits, the dependency on corporate and billionaire donors evaporates. Candidates spend their time talking to voters instead of dialing for dollars. This isn't radical it's how most functional democracies operate.

5. Aggressive Merger Presumption

Flip the burden of proof. Any merger involving firms above a certain market share threshold should be presumptively illegal, with the merging parties required to prove it won't harm competition not the other way around.

6. Corporate Death Penalty

Repeat offenders corporations that systematically violate laws and treat fines as a cost of doing business should face charter revocation. If you can't operate without breaking the law, you don't get to operate.

The standard push back is that breaking up large companies would hurt efficiency, raise prices, and make American firms less competitive globally.

This is propaganda funded by the companies that don't want to be broken up.

Consolidated industries don't produce lower prices they produce higher margins for shareholders. They don't produce more innovation they produce acquisition strategies to kill competitors before they become threats. They don't produce better working conditions they produce monopoly power to suppress wages.

The golden age of American economic growth the post war boom from 1945 to 1973 occurred during a period of strong antitrust enforcement, high marginal tax rates, and limited corporate political power. Productivity grew, wages rose with productivity, and inequality fell. The correlation isn't coincidental.

This isn't about economics textbooks. This is about whether your grandchildren live in a democracy or a corporate managed Neo-feudal state.

When a handful of companies control the food supply, the information environment, the healthcare system, the financial infrastructure, the defense industry, and the energy grid and when those same companies have captured the regulatory agencies and the legislative process you no longer have a government of the people.

You have a corporate state with a flag as a branding exercise.

The founders understood this threat. Thomas Jefferson warned about the aristocracy of our wealthy corporations which dare already to challenge our government to a trial of strength, and bid defiance to the laws of our country. That was 1816 before limited liability, before Citizens United, before the revolving door, before K Street.

What would he say now?

Systemic problems require systemic solutions, but individual action matters:

Support antitrust litigation through organizations funding legal challenges to monopolistic practices

Divest from concentrated industries where possible local alternatives, credit unions, independent media

Pressure state legislatures 22 states have already passed resolutions calling for a constitutional amendment to overturn Citizens United

Talk about it the propaganda relies on people thinking this is too complicated or too hopeless to engage with. It's not

Recognize that bipartisanship on this issue is a trap both parties are deeply compromised by corporate money, even if one is marginally less captive than the other

The corporations want you to feel powerless. That's the whole point learned helplessness is cheaper than actual repression.

Don't give them the satisfaction.

Sources:

Corporate lobbying spending elections 2024 2025 billions

Federal lobbying set new record in 2024 • OpenSecrets opensecrets.org

Federal Lobbying Statistics 2025: $37.7B Spent, 726K Filings — Complete Data | OpenLobby openlobby.us

Lobbying spending tops $5 billion in 2025 | LegiStorm legistorm.com

Federal Lobbying Spending Reached New High in 2024 - Bloomberg Government about.bgov.com

Corporate consolidation monopolies economic power United States

100 Years of Rising Corporate Concentration bfi.uchicago.edu

Executive Order on Promoting Competition in the American Economy | Legal Information Institute law.cornell.edu

democrats-smallbusiness.house.gov

democrats-smallbusiness.house.govfaculty.haas.berkeley.edu

faculty.haas.berkeley.edu

Regulatory capture revolving door corporations government agencies

A Dynamic Theory of Regulatory gtcenter.org

Regulating the Revolving Door of Regulators: Legal vs. Ethical Issues mdpi.com

Revolving doors and regulatory capture - CEPR cepr.org

Exposing the Revolving Door in Executive Branch Agencies | Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis | Cambridge Core cambridge.org

Citizens United corporate political spending influence

Fifteen Years Later, Citizens United Defined the 2024 Election | Brennan Center for Justice brennancenter.org

CITIZENS UNITED v. FEDERAL ELECTION COMM’N law.cornell.edu

Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission (08-205) | SCOTUSblog scotusblog.com

08-205 Citizens United v. Federal Election Comm'n (01/21/10) fec.gov


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The Corporate Capture of America: How Monopoly Power Bought the Republic

 By Staff There is no longer any serious debate about whether corporate power has captured the American government. The debate is only about...