A new watchdog report alleges that a large share of the corporate donors to the White House ballroom project have since won federal contracts worth more than $50 billion. Public Citizen, a nonprofit government watchdog group, found that 14 of the 27 publicly named donors to the $400 million project appear to have received that business in the months after they contributed to the effort. According to the report, those companies, which include major names like Lockheed Martin, Booz Allen Hamilton, and Palantir, apparently saw their federal contract funding grow in the period following the East Wing’s demolition in October 2025. The Washington Post says Lockheed Martin topped the list with roughly $43.8 billion in new or expanded contract funding over that window. Booz Allen Hamilton followed with more than $4.2 billion, while Palantir received just over $1 billion, according to the same findings. Other companies named in the report include Amazon, Microsoft, Google, Caterpillar, and T-Mobile. Separately, the report found that 16 of the 27 known donors are either currently involved in federal enforcement matters or have had such actions suspended or scaled back under the current administration. According to Public Citizen, this includes antitrust reviews involving Amazon, Apple, Meta, and Nvidia. Public Citizen author ties donations to corporate interests before the government The report also apparently points to labor-related disputes involving Google, Lockheed Martin, and Meta that, according to Public Citizen, have seen investigations eased or paused during the current administration. Jon Golinger, a public policy advocate at Public Citizen and one of the report’s authors, said in a statement: “These giant corporations aren’t funding the Trump ballroom fiasco out of the goodness of their hearts. They have massive interests before the federal government, and they hope to curry favor with, and receive favorable treatment from, the Trump administration.” The White House has reportedly pushed back against those claims, as White House spokesperson Davis Ingle said in a statement: “The same critics who are alleging fake conflicts of interests, would also complain if American taxpayers were footing the bill for these long-overdue renovations,” according to The Washington Post. More than half of the publicly identified donors to President Trump’s White House ballroom project have won new or expanded federal contracts worth more than $50 billion, according to a report from a government watchdog group. https://t.co/wEAqxMA7AG— The Washington Post (@washingtonpost) June 4, 2026 Ingle also appears to have defended the donor list and the project itself, stating: “The donors for the White House ballroom project represent a wide array of great American companies and generous individuals, all of whom are contributing to make the People’s House better for generations to come.” While the administration has publicly disclosed 21 corporate donors, reporting by news outlets has reportedly identified six additional contributors, bringing the known total to 27. The project’s funding structure has also apparently been scrutinized. Some Republicans previously pushed for taxpayers to cover the cost despite earlier commitments to private funding, and the project’s estimated cost has climbed toward $1 billion.