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'It's Trump 5.0': Lobbyists reveal how Trump is changing the influence game

The US Capital building, surrounded by palm trees
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iStock; Rebecca Zisser/BI

As Donald Trump returns to the White House promising to obliterate business as usual in Washington, the city's lobbyists are preparing for a seismic shift in how β€” and where β€” they do business.

"Florida is becoming the power nexus for the country," Bill Helmich, a lobbyist and close Trump ally, tells Business Insider. "It's where decisions will get made."

It's a sentiment echoed by Evan Power, a lobbyist who's serving as chair of the Florida GOP. "Florida is now the epicenter of Trumplandia," Power says.

A dozen leading lobbyists, some of whom spoke with BI on the condition of anonymity, say that having a significant presence in Florida is now an essential part of doing business in Washington. First and foremost, that means hiring lobbyists in the state to work the hallways and links at Mar-a-Lago, where Trump and his inner circle have been charting the transition and making Cabinet picks. A presence at the resort β€” along with the golf courses Trump owns in West Palm Beach, Doral, and Jupiter β€” is now seen as a major currency in the lobbying game.

Never before, lobbyists say, has the geographic center of power shifted so dramatically with the arrival of a new administration. In many respects, they say, Palm Beach is going to be the new K Street β€” the headquarters of the political-influence industry β€” particularly since Trump no longer owns a luxury hotel blocks from the White House.

"It hasn't been this exciting on Capitol Hill since 1994, when Republicans had their Contract with America."

What's more, the consensus among lobbyists is that anyone who hopes to influence Trump this time around will have to dispense with traditional lobbying conventions. "We can't do this the same old way," says one prominent lobbyist with ties to Trump. "Trump is such a wild card, and that gives him a lot of leverage. Cookie-cutter lobbying efforts probably won't work like they used to."

For Washington lobbyists, that means changing the way they talk about the world to appeal to the hardcore MAGA loyalists who have succeeded at commanding Trump's attention and dominating his inner circle. "This is not Trump 2.0," says Justin Sayfie, a partner at Ballard Partners, a powerhouse lobbying firm with deep Florida roots and an office down the road from Mar-a-Lago. "It's more like Trump 5.0. This is the most anti-Washington president we've elected since maybe Andrew Jackson."


When it comes to lobbying, the big winner of Trump's first term was Ballard Partners. The firm's success offers some lessons for lobbying firms itching to capitalize on their ties to Trump and his inner circle and establish a beachhead in Florida.

Before Trump's unexpected victory in 2016, Ballard Partners had no presence in Washington to speak of. But its founder, Brian Ballard, had been part of Trump's inner sanctum β€” first as a top fundraiser in Florida, then as part of the president-elect's transition team. By leveraging his access to Trump, Ballard Partners was able to compete with the old white-shoe lobbying firms that have been the industry's dominant players for decades.

In 2017, the first year of Trump's term, Ballard added dozens of major clients, including Google, Amazon, Uber, American Airlines, Honda, the tobacco giant Reynolds American, the private-prison firm Geo Group, and the American Health Care Association. By 2020, Ballard ranked as the nation's seventh-largest federal lobbying firm in terms of income β€” an astounding feat for an office that was only 3 years old. Ballard's lobbying business in Florida, meanwhile, regularly ranks among the state's top-earning firms, making it ideally positioned to once again be the go-to lobbying shop for corporations and special interests eager to cozy up to Trump and his MAGA allies in Congress.

Corporate clients need lobbyists who appreciate that Trump is "disrupting the status quo in Washington," Sayfie, the Ballard lobbyist, says. "This creates a sense of both possibility β€” and great worry and anxiety to navigate."

Any presidential transition poses significant challenges for corporations. Business thrives on stability; it's hard to make plans in the middle of all the uncertainty that comes from shifting political philosophies, legislative goals, and regulatory ambitions. But lobbying insiders say Trump's presidential transition has brought a new level of unpredictability β€” one that also represents a golden opportunity, for those able to capitalize on it.

"Trump has a mandate from the American people and is using it," says B. Jeffrey Brooks, a partner at Adams and Reese, a law firm with more than 300 attorneys and lobbyists across the country. "It hasn't been this exciting on Capitol Hill since 1994, when Republicans had their Contract with America."

Through his appointments and his campaign promises, lobbyists say, Trump has clearly signaled his desire to remake Washington in Florida's regulation-slashing, "woke"-fighting image β€” and do so from the comforts of his "Winter White House," now a political redoubt for all seasons. Already, many of the top slots in Trump's administration are going to Floridians who have stuck by him through his many legal and political troubles. Among them are two former Ballard lobbyists: Susie Wiles, whom Trump has tapped to serve as his White House chief of staff, and Pam Bondi, his choice for attorney general.

"Trump's team has distinct, new views that are not old Washington," says Colin Roskey, a principal at the FHP Strategies lobbying firm who served as a deputy assistant secretary of health and human services during the first Trump administration.

Some major companies, lobbyists say, have been caught off guard by the rapid pace of Trump's transition moves. "They're freaking out a little bit," says Dave Wenhold, a partner at Miller/Wenhold Capitol Strategies, which provides clients with lobbying and strategic planning. "Things are going to be coming at them fast and furiously, more than before, and this is where the lobbying community can really show its value."

There's also a new way corporations can seek to influence Trump β€”without disclosing their influence. Unlike his predecessors, Trump is allowing donors β€” including foreign nationals β€” to finance his transition in secret, through unlimited private contributions. Those who bankroll his staff and travel before he takes office, lobbyists say, stand to build connections and curry favor with the once and future commander in chief. "People appreciate people who invested in them," says Power, the chair of the Florida GOP.

Taken together, Trump's singular take-no-prisoners style has lobbyists excited about the possibilities for influence. Scott Mason, a senior policy advisor at the lobbying firm of Holland & Knight who served as the director of congressional relations for Trump's presidential campaign and transition team in 2016, is blunt about the prospects of Trump 2.0: "It'll be a great year for the lobbying world," he says.

Having a good lobbyist, in fact, may be more important than ever. Whatever companies think of Trump and his policies, they now face the prospect of a president who speaks openly about pursuing retribution for what he perceives as slights. On the campaign trail, Trump threatened John Deere with tariffs, called for the prosecution of Google, and tanked Meta's stock price by denouncing Facebook as "an enemy of the people." In an environment of fear and uncertainty, lobbyists expect their business to boom β€” likely surpassing the record $4.2 billion clients spent last year on federal lobbying.

"You have to recognize how Washington affects your business," Mason says. "If you're not at the table, you're on the menu."


Dave Levinthal is an investigative journalist based in Washington D.C. He was a reporter and editor at Business Insider until 2022.

Read the original article on Business Insider

Photos show Donald Trump and Elon Musk's post-election bromance

Donald Trump and Elon Musk at a UFC fight in New York City
President-elect Donald Trump and Tesla CEO Elon Musk have been nearly inseparable since the election, going to social and political events together.

Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC

  • In the two weeks since the election, Elon Musk and Donald Trump have been pretty much inseparable.
  • Musk spent at least $119 million to boost Trump's 2024 presidential campaign.
  • The Tesla CEO is set to co-lead the Department of Government Efficiency in Trump's second term.

It's been two weeks since President-elect Donald Trump won another four years in the White House. Tesla CEO Elon Musk has been by his side for much of that time.

Over the past fourteen days, Musk has hopped on the phone with at least two two foreign leaders, been tapped to lead his own government-efficiency commission, offered advice to Trump's transition team, and hunkered down at the president-elect's Mar-a-Lago club.

Musk also joined Trump at a meeting with House Republicans on November 13, sitting in the front row as the president-elect spoke.

"Elon won't go home," Trump said jokingly, two lawmakers in the room told NBC News. "I can't get rid of him."

Here's a look at Trump and Musk's whirlwind post-election partnership in photos, from boxing matches to golf games, with an eye on governing in between.

November 5

Elon Musk with Donald J. Trump on Election Night pic.twitter.com/yoK8YTjVBz

β€” America (@america) November 6, 2024

Election night photos of the two at Mar-a-Lago circulated on X, formerly known as Twitter. In a picture posted by Musk's America PAC, they sit huddled over a table as results stream in. A few days after Trump secured victory, Elon reveled in his unofficial role as bestie-in-chief, and posted on X that he's "happy to be first buddy."

Musk and his four-year-old son, X, later joined a family photo on Election Night.

The whole squad pic.twitter.com/5yQVkFiney

β€” Kai Trump (@KaiTrump) November 6, 2024
November 10

Elon achieving uncle status πŸ˜‚ pic.twitter.com/vufSffziZN

β€” Kai Trump (@KaiTrump) November 10, 2024

Kai Trump made Musk an honorary family member in a post on X a few days later, showing them golfing at Mar-a-Lago and saying that he'd achieved "uncle status." That same day, the young Trump posted a picture with her grandfather on the golf course.

Sundays with Grandpa πŸ’› pic.twitter.com/UfKdu0RJI7

β€” Kai Trump (@KaiTrump) November 10, 2024
November 14
Trump and Musk at Mar-a-Lago
Trump and Musk mingle at the America First Policy Institute Gala at Mar-a-Lago.

AP Photo/Alex Brandon

Trump celebrated his incoming administration at the America First Policy Institute Gala, which was held at Mar-a-Lago.

Musk went to the soirΓ©e, which was filled with GOP officials who will be a key part of Trump's second term as he returns to Washington in January.

November 16
Trump and Musk
Trump and Musk were chummy at UFC 309 at Madison Square Garden.

Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC

Trump attended the UFC 309 event at Madison Square Garden in New York City, which marked a return to his home city and the site of a controversial October rally where a comedian made several crude jokes in advance of the election.

The president-elect was accompanied by UFC president Dana White, along with Musk and several other key figures in his orbit: House Speaker Mike Johnson of Louisiana; Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Trump's choice to lead the Department of Health and Human Services in his second term; and former Rep. Tulsi Gabbard of Hawaii, whom Trump tapped to be his next director of national intelligence.

November 18

Make America Healthy Again starts TOMORROW. πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡ΈπŸ‡ΊπŸ‡ΈπŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ pic.twitter.com/LLzr5S9ugf

β€” Donald Trump Jr. (@DonaldJTrumpJr) November 17, 2024

Donald Trump Jr. posted a photo on X of his dad's inner circle sharing a meal on an airplane, with Musk sitting next to the president-elect. The three of them are eating McDonald's alongside Kennedy Jr., as Johnson stands in the background.

Musk and Trump smile over trays of french fries, quarter pounders, and 10-piece chicken nuggets.

November 19
Elon Musk greets Donald Trump
President-elect Donald Trump greets Elon Musk before the launch of the sixth test flight of the SpaceX Starship rocket Tuesday, Nov. 19, 2024 in Brownsville, Texas.

Brandon Bell/Pool via AP

The President-elect and SpaceX CEO were pictured on Tuesday hugging ahead of SpaceX's sixth test flight of its Starship rocket.

"I'm heading to the Great State of Texas to watch the launch of the largest object ever to be elevated, not only to Space, but simply by lifting off the ground," Trump wrote in a post on Musk's social media platform, X, before the event. "Good luck to @ElonMusk and the Great Patriots involved in this incredible project!"

Musk wrote in a subsequent post that he was "honored" to have Trump in attendance.

The launch of the rocket was successful, but the company abandoned its attempt to catch its Super Heavy booster after takeoff. SpaceX had previously announced it would not attempt to catch the booster if proper catch criteria were not met after launch.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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