Billions of dollars have been stolen at USAID and used to pay for positive media coverage of Democrats, US President Donald Trump has claimed. The White House has also announced that it will stop “subsidising” the Politico media outlet.
The administration of Donald Trump initiated significant changes to the US Agency for International Development (USAID), ordering a near-total freeze in billions of dollars worth of foreign aid, in a bid to realign the agency, which had a budget of some $60 billion in 2023, with his “America First” policy.
Trump took to Truth Social on Thursday to warn that “the biggest scandal in history” was brewing, after White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt acknowledged that American taxpayer money had been used to subsidise government subscriptions to Politico and other media outlets.
Subscriptions to Politico Pro, a premium legislative and regulatory tracking service used by multiple government agencies are reported to cost up to $10,000 annually.
”Looks like billions of dollars have been stollen [sic] at USAID, and other agencies, much of it going to the fake news media as a ‘payoff’ for creating good stories about the democrats. the left wing ‘rag,’ known as ‘Politico,’ seems to have received $8,000,000,” Trump wrote.
He questioned whether The New York Times and other outlets were also receiving "payoffs".
Politico retorted that it had “never been the beneficiary of government programs or subsidies” and that the “overwhelming majority” of subscriptions come from the private sector.
Some conservative commentators have claimed that Politico, The New York Times and the Associated Press received “government funding” or “grants", from USAID and other agencies. Kyle Becker, a former Fox News producer, dug into public records on USAspending.gov and discovered that the government paid Politico $8.2 million in the last 12 months. However, only about $24,000 of this total came from USAID, with the largest contributor being the Department of Health and Human Services.
Elon Musk, who oversees the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), called the payments "a huge waste of taxpayer money".
“Many media outlets are going to experience a mysterious drop in revenue,” he warned on X on Wednesday.
The outlets in question have denied receiving government subsidies, stating that agencies purchased subscriptions like any client, and insisted on their editorial independence.
CNN went as far as to decry the accusations as "a false right-wing conspiracy theory", and accused Leavitt of elevating a "bogus claim".