In this article we explain why joining Ethical Consumer’s boycott campaign of Amazon can be a way to express more than just a disapproval of its UK tax avoidance.
Amazon's political ties
Amazon might be better known for its delivery vans than political manoeuvring, but the company’s history with Donald Trump and right-wing power structures reveal how oligarchs don’t just benefit from authoritarian rule, they build the infrastructure for it. As Trump’s second presidency continues, it’s worth re-examining Amazon’s political ties and why campaigning against them remains urgent.
Amazon has donated $1 million to Trump’s inaugural fund, sent Jeff Bezos to the 2025 inauguration to sit in billionaire’s row, and has since spent millions on lobbying for tax cuts, surveillance contracts, and union-busting protections. In the latest in a line of deals, Amazon will pay a reported $40 million for a documentary about Melania Trump, most of which will line the pockets of the Trump family.
Despite the press pageantry about Trump’s feud with The Washington Post owner, the reality is simple. Amazon has always benefited handsomely from the Trump agenda: Deregulation, tax cuts, attacks on labour, surveillance expansion.
With Trump back in office and pushing through a second round of cuts that will keep capital gains taxes low and corporate loopholes wide open, Amazon stands to gain again, without putting anything back into the systems it exploits.
Trump’s tax cuts help fund Amazon’s union busting
Amazon is a perfect case study of how a rigged tax system expands the power of corporations and the wealthy over both our economy and democracy itself.
Trump’s 2017 “Tax Cuts and Jobs Act” slashed the corporate tax rate from 35% to 21%, handing billions to companies like Amazon while claiming it would boost wages and investment. In reality, Amazon has barely lifted its median worker pay in the US (up just 3.3%) since 2018. Over the same period, the company paid an average effective US tax rate of just 5%.
Fair Tax Foundation also found it to be the worst tax avoider globally of all big six tech firms.
Most recently, Trump pushed through the so-called “One Big, Beautiful Bill” – a sweeping expansion of the same corporate handouts – with critics renaming it what it is: “Big, Ugly Bill”. It locks in capital gains loopholes, preserves the 21% corporate rate, and ensures that billionaires like Bezos continue to pay less tax (proportionally) than warehouse workers.
Amazon provides a telling example of the real cost of these giveaways – not just in lost public revenue, but in political power. The company hasn’t used its windfall to invest in its workforce. Instead, it has poured millions into union-busting campaigns: hired an army of lobbyists to block labour reform, flooding warehouses with anti-union propaganda, and using surveillance to intimidate union organisers. Between 2021 and 2024, workers in Alabama and New York faced retaliation, misinformation, and illegal interference simply for trying to organise.
Now, with Trump’s new appointments at the National Labour Relations Board and a Republican-led Congress preparing to gut labour protections, Amazon’s war on workplace democracy has found the perfect political climate.
It’s no coincidence that when corporations and authoritarian governments share the same enemies – workers, unions, democracy – they stop operating as separate entities and start to look like partners. Amazon doesn’t just fear collective bargaining, it funds the political regime that dismantles it.