Friday, June 12, 2026

Trump bought tobacco stocks and raked in industry donations as FDA eased standards

Trump bought tobacco stocks and raked in industry donations as FDA eased standards

https://www.dailykos.com/stories/2026/6/12/800053588/news/trump-bought-tobacco-stocks-and-raked-in-industry-donations-as-fda-eased-standards/ 

Trump bought tobacco stocks and raked in industry donations as FDA eased standards

President Donald Trump speaks during a meeting with Japan's Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi in the Oval Office of the White House, Thursday, March 19, 2026, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)
APDonald Trump in the Oval Office on March 19.

By Darius Tahir for KFF


President Donald Trump, who once declared he had “saved” flavored vapes, grew his stock holdings this year to as much as $1.64 million in tobacco giant Philip Morris.

He also had holdings in Altria and a third leading tobacco company, though an apparent discrepancy in his disclosures clouds the extent of his investments. In 2025, tobacco interests donated $6 million to MAGA Inc., a super PAC that supports the president, and Trump’s inauguration. And, on April 30, a week before FDA guidance that provided a critical boost to the industry, Reynolds American dropped an additional $5 million into the super PAC’s coffers.

The stock trades and political contributions occurred as the Trump administration pursued a broadly pro-tobacco agenda: Its FDA piloted a fast-track program to approve nicotine pouches. It unveiled a program to allow vapes on the market more rapidly, despite resistance from career civil servants and leadership, culminating this year in guidance waving through flavored electronic cigarettes. It cut public health employees focusing on anti-tobacco policy. And it broadened enforcement against illicit e-cigarettes, competitors to the big industry players with a financial relationship to Trump.

FILE - In this April 11, 2018, file photo, a high school student uses a vaping device near a school campus in Cambridge, Mass. The Trump administration announced Thursday that it will prohibit fruit, candy, mint and dessert flavors from small, cartridge-based e-cigarettes that are popular with high school students. But menthol and tobacco-flavored e-cigarettes will be allowed to remain on the market.  (AP Photo/Steven Senne, File)
APA high school student uses a vaping device in April 2018 near a school campus in Cambridge, Mass.

It amounts to the most pro-tobacco, pro-nicotine presidency in some time — a remarkable policy given the tens of millions of deaths cigarettes caused during the 20th century. Even in recent years, anti-smoking groups say a half-million Americans a year die from cigarettes. Industry advocates say the toll helps justify a shift to e-cigarettes and nicotine pouches, which they say are less harmful. However, public health advocates say these products carry their own risks, such as addiction.

Lawmakers and public health leaders have criticized the recent FDA guidance and approvals as a “lucrative payday” that ignored scientific evidence to deliver what investment analysts have described as “very positive” steps for influential tobacco companies.

The scale of the money is “unprecedented and problematic,” said Brian King, who was pushed out of the FDA’s tobacco office last April and now works as an executive at the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids. He fears that steering public policy toward tobacco — still addictive and harmful to health — puts Americans at risk.

“It’s a gift on a platter with a side of public health malpractice,” he said.

The White House did not comment on the president’s investments or industry donations to MAGA Inc. Spokesperson Kush Desai said, “The only guiding factor behind the Trump administration’s health policymaking is Gold Standard Science. FDA’s regulatory treatment of nicotine pouches and vapes is rooted in recent evidence that has found that these products can help adults quit smoking.”

Philip Morris disputed any connection. Company representatives “regularly attend events and forums where we share our commitment to improving public health in the United States,” spokesperson Samuel Dashiell said, arguing that the company’s vapes offer a safer alternative to smoking cigarettes. “We do not comment on individual engagements or on the personal financial matters or disclosures of public officials.” Other tobacco companies whose stock Trump has bought and sold during his second term or that donated to groups aligned with Trump — Juul, Reynolds American, and Altria — did not respond to requests for comment.

The financial stakes are huge. Investment analysts at Goldman Sachs say the newer products, touted as safer, make more money per sale than traditional cigarettes. Philip Morris expects Zyn pouches, for example, to make eight times the gross profits of its cigarettes, Goldman Sachs analysts said in March 2025.

FILE - Containers of Zyn, a smokeless nicotine pouch, are displayed for sale among other nicotine and tobacco products at a newsstand on Feb. 23, 2024, in New York. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews, File)
APContainers of Zyn, a smokeless nicotine pouch, are displayed for sale at a newsstand in New York City in Feb. 2024.

When he ran for his second term, Trump promoted himself as a pro-tobacco candidate, posting that he had “saved” flavored vaping and that President Joe Biden and Democratic nominee Kamala Harris “want everything banned.”

Since late 2023, MAGA Inc. has received over $20 million in funding from the industry, federal campaign records show. Trump’s inauguration garnered nearly $4 million more. His ballroom project has disclosed donations of an unknown amount from Altria and Reynolds American.

Recent Trump administration actions show he’s followed through with his campaign rhetoric. In May, the FDA released consequential guidance that allows manufacturers to market their vapes and nicotine pouches while awaiting agency approval. It also approved several vaping products. The month before, the Vapor Technology Association, which donated $1.25 million to Trump’s inauguration, told its vape-manufacturer members it had met with the White House to discuss its concerns.

By that point, Trump had gone on a stock-purchasing spree. In March he made eight separate purchases of Philip Morris or Altria stock, worth as much as $275,000, according to a disclosure form that bears Trump’s signature.

It is difficult to be precise about Trump’s tobacco investments, because the financial disclosures show only ranges of investment amounts. They also have an apparent discrepancy. In January, the president sold $500,000 to $1,000,000 in Altria stock. But that’s confusing because previous disclosures didn’t show Trump held that much equity in Altria. The White House declined to comment on the matter.


Related | More than a dozen US government health-tracking programs have been gutted


The FDA’s May guidance and approvals drew condemnation from public health leaders, who worry that the agency is allowing products with flavors especially appealing to young people. “After years of recognizing the dangers flavored e-cigarettes pose to youth, it is deeply troubling to see FDA ignore the scientific evidence and reverse course,” American Lung Association CEO Harold Wimmer said in a published statement.

“I think it’s blatantly illegal, both on its merits and also procedurally, because it was issued as a final guidance without even giving the public an opportunity to comment on it,” said Mitch Zeller, a former head of the FDA’s tobacco center.

A group of Democratic senators called the decision a “a free pass to addictive and harmful vapes” in letters to Reynolds American and Altria. It would lead to “a lucrative payday after years of unsuccessful legislative and regulatory efforts to weaken federal tobacco oversight,” they concluded.

Members of Congress are barred from insider trading, and many legislators would like to see trading of individual company stocks banned for all members. In the wake of Trump’s most recent financial disclosures, with revelations that he often traded in companies manufacturing GLP-1 drugs before his administration steered policy in a favorable direction, some members are calling for the president, too, to be barred from stock trading.

Trump’s tobacco policies have garnered favorable grades from investors. At Goldman Sachs, bankers described the May FDA guidance as “very positive” for Philip Morris and “a significant step in the FDA’s positioning toward enforcement and acceptance of nic pouch (as well as e-vapor) innovation generally.”

And Barclays analysts said the FDA’s guidance was good news for Juul, a leading vape producer. (In November, the company contributed $1 million to MAGA Inc.)

A cartoon by Drew Sheneman of Trump holding bags of money.
Drew Sheneman/Tribune Content Agency

FDA resistance to speeding up approvals for these products reportedly contributed to the ouster of agency commissioner Marty Makary, who did not respond to requests for comment. According to The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal, the White House repeatedly intervened in the approval process.

“I served during the entire first Trump administration as center director, and there was never any pressure from any political appointee at FDA, at HHS, or the White House when it came to application review,” Zeller said.

But recent changes in FDA policy can be traced to the access tobacco firms have had to the White House, he said.

By and large, the Trump administration has delivered on industry priorities. Soon after the inauguration — which tobacco companies had donated heavily to — the administration withdrew a Biden-era proposal to ban menthol cigarettes. The administration has eased the path for nicotine pouches such as Zyn. Investment analysts viewed government crackdowns on illicit e-cigarettes positively: Barclays wrote in January that “company commentary on enforcement has also been upbeat, suggesting that the tide could begin to turn in favour of the legal players in the market.”

What’s more, the Trump administration’s government layoffs have decimated public health’s tobacco control offices. The work of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s office of smoking has been sharply curtailed; its flagship “Tips From Former Smokers” campaign, which seeks to persuade viewers not to smoke, has been off the air for months, King said.

“It’s not difficult to see that less dollars invested in prevention and control is going to lead to more tobacco product use and tobacco-related disease,” King said, especially given the government’s decades-long success in reducing cigarette usage.

The shift is particularly ironic given the administration’s focus — through its Make America Healthy Again slogan — on chronic disease. “Attempting to combat chronic disease without tobacco control is like attempting a triathlon without a bicycle: You are destined for failure before leaving the starting line,” King concluded.

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  1. Comment by Real Rick.

    PLEASE no pictures of the orange Felon.

    You could have just used a picture of a vape and/or caper as your title pic.

  2. Comment by CoastalLib.

    Grifters gotta grift.

  3. Comment by Digler.

    Trump prowling around stealing anything that ain't chained down

    Good article and cartoon depicting the truth.

  4. Comment by suzeli.

    trump never expected to win in 2016, so he certainly hadn't planned on cashing in on the insider trading opportunities the presidency offers an unethical officeholder, but if he were being honest (yeah, I know...), he'd say that he'd be a fool not to.

  5. Comment by ElimuNzuri.

    When I was in junior high school back in the late 1950's, I was ostracized because I did not smoke. And, let's not forget Hollywood's role. Many of the movies in the 1950's featured macho men who smoked. I am still alive and doing quite well. Most of the kids I went to school with are dead. So, who gets the last laugh? Now history is repeating itself thanks to Traitor Trump. A generation of gullible young people will condemn themselves to horrible, painful deaths.

    • Reply by Sue Blue.

      My father has stage IVb lung cancer that metastasized to his brain. He's outlived expectations in spite of his other health issues like diabetes, a history of stroke, prostate cancer, thyroid cancer, and others; he's still alive 5 years after his diagnosis, his radiation, and his super-expensive experimental chemo. He was a smoker for my entire childhood at home, and both his parents and grandparents all smoked. It was probably the cigarettes that led to the lung cancer - although he has a genetic mutation that predisposes to lung cancer, even in nonsmokers - but he also grew up in LA when the city was a constant pool of impenetrable smog, and he spent his entire adult life working in underground mines as a mining engineer, exposed to some of the highest levels of radon and other harmful gases and chemicals a person can be. So we can't exactly blame the cigarettes without reservation. Still, I too was exposed to all that cigarette smoke in spite of not ever smoking myself, as were my sisters and my mother (she died last June with advanced dementia but no lung cancer). None of us has any sign of lung cancer...yet. But I watch every cough - and as an RN I constantly rail against smoking, vaping, and tobacco in all forms. I remember the kids I grew up with in rural Colorado and Montana who dipped snuff, and how even as young adults, many had developed severe dental problems and later ended up with oral and head/neck cancers, which are at best disfiguring and disabling, and at worst, fatal.

  6. Comment by xerorest.

    Rhat picture of the oval office looks like someone did some creative unrinating on it.

  7. Comment by Whatsnuts.

    So insider trading, bribery and massive corruption are "official act's" now. Okay.

    • Reply by World traveller.

      I almost responded with more specifics but "massive corruption" covered the rest.

  8. Comment by gdaigon.

    Who could have foreseen this?

  9. Comment by Ralphdog.

    Rancid corruption, part #317.

    He's not even pretending to hide it any more. Why bother when the entire Republican party is your rubber stamp, and when a corrupt Supreme Court has bestowed immunity upon you.

  10. Comment by Betty Lou.

    Making money in any way he can that's what 47 lives for. As for norms or the rule of law that matters to him not one iota, he's been allowed to get away with far too much as there's no one to stop him. He's having the time of his life ripping off the American people with a grin on his smarmy face as he does it.

    • Reply by A Noah Count.

      And when he dies, he'll still be just as dead as when he didn't have all that ill-gotten loot.

    • Reply by wizbing.

      There are plenty of people who could stop him, in Congress in the courts, in DA offices, IN THE MEDIA, but no one does anything. I believe it starts with the news media, mainly the national TV news broadcasts and the major newspapers. If they say nothing about this, then the public is only vaguely aware than corruption is happening, but don't know the specifics. If the public is not aware of this particular ripoff, then nothing will be done because those who could do something don't have the public support.

    • Reply by suzeli.

      And his kids are already jockeying to see which of them can be the kiss-assiest, to get the lion's share in his will.

    • Reply by jjohnjj.

      KFF is the part of the news media. NYT covered the deregulation of vaping pretty extensively last month. https://www.nytimes.com/search?query=vaping - including the industry's donations to Trump's election campaign and ballroom slush fund. PBS News ran a story about Vape deregulation on May 22.

      This item about Trump's investments in tobacco is original reporting, and it's brand new. We need to give the newsrooms a day or three to see if they will pick it up.

      In the meantime, the rest of us can push this headline into open comments on public pages elsewhere on social media. The papers and the networks all maintain pages on Facebook, Instagram and YouTube. If they see some "buzz" about this in the comments, they are more likely to consider the topic "newsworthy".

    • Reply by World traveller.

      If there is any possibility of an afterlife, I'd like to see how reacts when he's told "No, you have to have been a real idiot to think you could take it with you. Excuse me, I have Satan on the other line."

    • Reply by A Noah Count.

      It's more than likely, considering they're HIS spawn, they'll be "at each other's throats" to be the ONLY one who gets it all.

      Not unlike how the Pumpkin Pinochet screwed his brother Fred Jr. out of his inheritance.

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