Charles Schwab Corp. announced Wednesday it will no longer make financial contributions to political campaigns.
The firm said it is shutting down its political action committee, the mechanism through which it collects voluntary contributions from its employees and directors that are then distributed to lawmakers.
The move comes a week after a mob supporting President Donald Trump stormed the U.S. Capitol and disrupted congressional certification of the Electoral College vote that later affirmed President-elect Joe Biden’s victory.
When the electoral vote count resumed, more than 140 members of Congress voted to object to the results from two key swing states won by Biden. In the aftermath, several financial firms, including Schwab, and financial industry trade associations announced they would temporarily halt political donations — either to lawmakers who rejected the presidential vote or to all politicians.
Schwab went a step further on Wednesday and permanently shut down its political spending.
“In light of a divided political climate and an increase in attacks on those participating in the political process, we believe a clear and apolitical position is in the best interest of our clients, employees, stockholders and the communities in which we operate,” Schwab said in a statement. “Schwab will donate all remaining funds in the PAC to worthwhile recipients that have received regular support from the firm in the past: The Boys & Girls Club of America and Historically Black Colleges and Universities.”
Schwab’s PAC contributed $541,000 to political campaigns during the 2020 election cycle, according to Federal Election Commission data through late November.
“As a champion for the ‘Main Street’ investor, we have long believed in advocating for an appropriate regulatory landscape for individual investors and those who serve them,” Schwab said. “But in today’s hyper-partisan environment, it is becoming more difficult to stay true to our long-standing commitment to bipartisanship while fulfilling our role of advocate and educator.”
Schwab vowed to continue to shape policy by lobbying lawmakers and regulators even though it is shutting off its political donations. In 2020, Schwab spent $1.97 million on lobbying through Sept. 30, according to the Center for Responsive Politics.
“While we will not contribute financially through our PAC, we are confident our voice will still be heard in Washington,” Schwab said.
Investors' tendency to choose external goalposts can seriously impact their odds of long-term success – and they might not even know it.
“We fear that it will be ‘open season’ from the plaintiffs’ bar on plan fiduciaries who are early adopters of alternative investments,” said Tim Collins, a partner at Duane Morris.
Industry report shows that there are now fewer firms as consolidation intensifies.
The firms building now have a head start that will be very difficult to close. The ones waiting are accumulating a debt they may not be able to repay.
Global revenues hit record high in 2025 with sector growing at four times the rate of traditional financial institutions.
As $84 trillion prepares to change hands, advisors who treat estate planning as peripheral are quietly building a sieve, not a book.
In volatile markets, the advisors who win aren't the ones with the best calls - they're the ones whose clients stay the course.