Quarterly Journal of Political Science > Vol 20 > Issue 4

For Reputation's Sake: Shifts in Corporate Political Activity After the Capitol Insurrection

Alexander Cohen, Ph.D. Candidate, Department of Political Science, University of California, Davis, USA, agcohen@ucdavis.edu
 
Suggested Citation
Alexander Cohen (2025), "For Reputation's Sake: Shifts in Corporate Political Activity After the Capitol Insurrection", Quarterly Journal of Political Science: Vol. 20: No. 4, pp 477-512. http://dx.doi.org/10.1561/100.00024128

Publication Date: 05 Nov 2025
© 2025 A. Cohen
 
Subjects
Panel data,  Time series analysis,  Organizational behavior,  Branding and brand equity,  Campaign finance,  Congress,  Democracy,  Strategic decision-making
 
Keywords
Congresscampaign financeJanuary 6Capitol Insurrectioncorporate political activitycorporate social responsibility
 

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In this article:
Corporations, Contributions, and Congress 
Theory and Hypotheses 
Data 
Methodology and Variables 
Difference-in-Differences Estimates 
How Public Reputation Shapes Responsiveness 
Conclusion 
References 

Abstract

How did firms adjust their corporate political activity (CPA) in response to the January 6th Capitol Insurrection? Through a longitudinal study of campaign contributions from Fortune 500 companies' political action committees to members of Congress, I estimate the size and duration of corporate penalties toward legislators who objected to the 2020 election results. Using a Difference-in-Differences design, I find a sharp but declining penalty against election deniers in the 2022 and 2024 election cycles. While firms that pledged to cut off their contributions did so to the greatest degree, I find evidence of this behavior across most large corporations. I suggest that corporate social responsibility and concerns over public reputation shape corporate responsiveness to political shocks like January 6th, and show that more visible corporations were more likely to keep their distance from election deniers. These findings emphasize the important trade-off between access-seeking behavior and public reputation in the corporate response to political controversies, and in CPA more generally.

DOI:10.1561/100.00024128

Online Appendix | 100.00024128_app.pdf

This is the article's accompanying appendix.

DOI: 10.1561/100.00024128_app

Replication Data | 100.00024128_supp.zip (ZIP).

This file contains the data that is required to replicate the data on your own system.

DOI: 10.1561/100.00024128_supp