In 2025, Donald Trump has collected what many observers describe as extraordinary settlement payments—far beyond his official presidential salary. His inflow of corporate payouts has become a point of controversy, as critics raise questions about potential conflicts of interest when a sitting president receives large sums from private companies
Senator Bernie Sanders took to social media to highlight the figures, calling the pattern “what kleptocracy looks like.” In his post, he listed a series of companies and the amounts paid to Trump in 2025, including nine-figure sums
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A Presidential Salary — and Much More
As president, Trump receives the standard annual salary of $400,000, together with an additional $50,000 non-taxable expense allowance, a $100,000 travel budget and a $19,000 entertainment fund. But these amounts pale in comparison to the documented settlements he has secured this year.
Major Corporate Settlements in 2025
Here are some of the major payouts that either have been confirmed or are under scrutiny:
Meta Platforms agreed to a settlement of $25 million to resolve Trump’s 2021 lawsuit over account suspensions following the January 6 riot.
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YouTube (under Alphabet) settled with Trump for $24.5 million in September 2025. Of that, $22 million is allocated to the “Trust for the National Mall” to help fund a White House ballroom project.
X Corp (formerly Twitter) reportedly paid $10 million early in 2025 to settle Trump’s case over the permanent suspension of his account.
Paramount Global (parent of CBS) announced a $16 million settlement in July 2025 tied to a lawsuit over a “60 Minutes” interview; Trump claims the total benefit was closer to $36 million when including advertising value.
Senator Sanders’ post also referred to other large amounts: $3 billion from crypto, $940 million from law firms, $400 million plane deal in Qatar, and a potential $230 million from the Department of Justice. These latter figures remain unverified
Questions of Ethics and Influence
The big question raised by lawmakers and public watchdogs is: Should a sitting president be receiving multimillion-dollar payouts from corporations while overseeing federal policy, enforcement actions and regulatory agencies?
Senators including Sanders, Elizabeth Warren and Ron Wyden have pressed for transparency, particularly regarding the YouTube settlement, warning it could resemble a bribe to influence justice-department or merger-approval decisions.
In the case of YouTube, the scrutiny focused on whether the $24.5 million payment—of which the bulk goes to a Trump-connected nonprofit—was tied in any way to antitrust decisions that the Trump administration could influence.
What This Means for Public Perception
For many older Americans, the optics are troubling. While the headline salary of $400,000 seems modest for a president, the added settlement income suggests a very different financial reality. The accumulation of payouts suggests that leadership in the White House may be intertwined with private corporate interests.
Whether these settlements are legal or ethical—or whether they undermine public trust—is a question that has reached beyond Washington and into everyday conversations.
The Road Ahead
As of now:
The Meta and YouTube settlements are publicly confirmed.
The Paramount/CBS case remains under dispute, with Trump’s claimed additional advertisement value not formally recognized by Paramount
The alleged $230 million claim against the Department of Justice is still speculative.
Senator Sanders’ framing of the issue remains: “This is what kleptocracy looks like.” And many Americans are asking: Is this savvy negotiation—or something else entirely?
