Category: Business

  • Several state officials demand feds protect Americans’ retirement plans by clearly regulating ESG investments

    Several state officials demand feds protect Americans’ retirement plans by clearly regulating ESG investments

    EXCLUSIVE: Nearly two dozen state financial officers are calling on federal financial regulators to issue clear guidance and establish new rules concerning ESG-centered investing. 

    ESG stands for “environmental, social and governance,” and can conflict with investments made strictly from a fiduciary standpoint. The officers aim to protect Americans’ passive retirement plans through these measures. 

    State treasurers and auditors from Alaska to South Carolina wrote to the acting heads of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and Department of Labor (DOL) after a Texas court ruling against American Airlines in a suit brought by a pilot concerned about the investments within his retirement plan.

    GREEN GOVERNANCE IS THE NEW GUISE FOR MERCANTILISM: HERITAGE’S KEVIN ROBERTS

    “We, therefore, request SEC and DoL take decisive action to uphold fiduciary duty laws and protect retirement plans from activist corrosion,” the state officials wrote.

    “Specifically, we call on your agencies to issue comprehensive guidance … initiate rulemaking … [and] increase oversight and enforcement” of fiduciary rules.

    A Wall Street sign in front of an American flag (Reuters/Mike Segar / Reuters Photos)

    On Jan. 15, Bush-appointed federal Judge Reed O’Connor ruled in favor of the pilot, who alleged his employer did not properly monitor the proxy voting of investment managers they were doing business with, including BlackRock.

    The airline’s own ESG goals also conflicted with those of some of the investment firms, according to allegations chronicled by ESG Dive.

    The state officials asked the SEC and DOL to reaffirm a Supreme Court ruling that fiduciaries must discharge their duties solely in the financial interests of retirement plan participants and that proxy voting may not be motivated by non-fiduciary concerns such as achieving environmental or progressive social goals like reducing emissions.

    DOZENS OF FINANCIAL FIRMS ACCUSED OF PUTTING ENVIRO POLICY OVER SHAREHOLDERS

    “There is an indisputable trend, among large asset managers, to prioritize political and social agendas over the financial security of hardworking Americans. Retirement security should not be jeopardized in order to facilitate corporate virtue signaling and activist-driven initiatives,” they wrote.

    Such “mixed motives” — if a retirement plan manager considers ESG above or in addition to the highest possible rate of return for the beneficiary — cannot be tolerated legally or ethically, the officials wrote.

    Investing in such a way “triggers an irrebuttable presumption of wrongdoing” on the part of the investment manager firm.

    In the American Airlines case, the court found that ESG investments often underperform traditional investments by about 10%.

    It also found BlackRock “publicly vowed to support more shareholder proposals on climate change, even at major energy companies that make money from the production of fossil fuels.” 

    However, the airline’s retirement plan investments with the mega-firm were reportedly limited to index funds that have no political or social bent but may, by definition, coincidentally contain shares of individual companies that embrace ESG principles in their business model.

    An AA spokesperson confirmed to ESG Dive that BlackRock’s role was limited to passive index funds and that the ruling focused on AA’s oversight of the firm’s proxy voting in alignment with industry best practices.

    OJ Oleka, leader of the State Financial Officers Foundation (SFOF), members of which signed the letter, said it has been troubling to see asset managers and administrators “pushing political and social agendas at the expense of what’s best for everyday Americans.”

    “The recent court ruling against American Airlines is a clear example of the risks of prioritizing ESG and DEI over financial returns,” Oleka told Fox News Digital.

    “Fiduciaries have a duty to focus on the financial well-being of those they serve, and when they don’t, it’s a disservice to their beneficiaries and potentially illegal.”

    He expressed hope the federal government will step in to reinforce that firms should be prioritizing financial benefit over “distractions” that undermine financial security.

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    In response to being mentioned as an example in the letter, a BlackRock representative told Fox News Digital the investment giant always makes decisions with investor gains in mind.

    “We always act independently and with a singular focus on what is in the best financial interests of our clients,” the spokesperson said.

    “Our only agenda is maximizing returns for our clients, consistent with their choices.”

    A source familiar with the issues raised by SFOF claimed they have mostly been resolved.

    The state of Tennessee recently settled an ESG case against BlackRock, and the firm has also departed a Wall Street alliance geared toward “net zero” emissions.

    Jeff Eller, executive director of the Alliance for Prosperity and a Secure Retirement, told Fox News Digital the American Airlines ruling that preceded the letter was the “legal equivalent of junk science.”

    “It is full of inaccuracies and contradictory claims. It is only a matter of time before it is most likely reversed on appeal. which will protect the retirement plans for millions of Americans,” Eller said.

  • Honda recalls nearly 295K Honda, Acura vehicles for risk of engine stall, power loss

    Honda recalls nearly 295K Honda, Acura vehicles for risk of engine stall, power loss

    Honda is recalling nearly 295,000 Honda and Acura vehicles that could potentially suffer engine stalls or loss of power from faulty software. 

    In total, 294,612 of the automaker’s 2023-2025 Honda Pilot sport utility vehicles (SUVs), 2022-2025 Acura MDX Type-S SUVs and 2021-2025 Acura TLX Type-S sedans are subject to the Jan. 23 recall addressing the improperly programmed software in the fuel injection electronic control units, according to a National Highway Traffic Safety Administration recall report.

    Some Honda Pilot sport utility vehicles from the model years 2023-2025 are subject to the recall (Honda)

    Honda said “sudden changes in the throttle could illuminate the check engine light and cause the engine to lose drive power, hesitate and/or stall” because of the software. 

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    That, the automaker said in the recall report, could heighten crash or injury risks. 

    OVER 80,000 KIA ELECTRIC, HYBRID VEHICLES RECALLED OVER ISSUES WITH AIRBAGS: NHTSA

    Honda explained it was “announcing this recall to encourage owners of affected vehicles to take them to an authorized dealer for repair as soon as they receive notification.” 

    The problem has not resulted in any injuries or accidents as of Jan. 16, the recall report said. 

    Honda Dealership

    The logo of Honda seen at a dealership store. Honda is a Japanese multinational automotive manufacturing company. (Igor Golovniov/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    The automaker discovered the improper programming by “monitoring telematics information” and is providing the potentially affected vehicles with a software update, per a press release.

    TENS OF THOUSANDS OF JEEP CHEROKEES RECALLED OVER ISSUE THAT ‘INCREASES RISK OF CRASHES’

    Staff at authorized Honda and Acura dealerships will “reprogram” the FI-ECU with software that “contains the proper correction control logic settings” at no cost to owners, the report said. 

    LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - FEBRUARY 13: A view of an Acura TLX Type S at the Players Tailgate by Bullseye Event Group on February 13, 2022 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Jesse Grant/Getty Images for Bullseye Event Group)

    A view of an Acura TLX Type S at the Players Tailgate by Bullseye Event Group on February 13, 2022 in Los Angeles, California. (Jesse Grant/Getty Images for Bullseye Event Group / Getty Images)

    Owners of the recalled Honda Pilots, Acura MDXs and Acura TLXs should be on the lookout for a letter in the mail regarding the recall in mid-March. 

    THESE 5 AUTO RECALLS AFFECTED THE LARGEST NUMBER OF VEHICLES IN 2024

    Honda first introduced the Acura brand nearly four decades ago. In 2024, more than 132,300 Acura and 1.291 million Honda vehicles were sold in the U.S., American Honda reported.

    American Honda’s more than 1.42 million vehicle sales across both brands in 2024 marked an 8.8% year-over-year increase. 

  • Powell pushes back on Musk’s claim Fed is ‘absurdly overstaffed’

    Powell pushes back on Musk’s claim Fed is ‘absurdly overstaffed’

    Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell pushed back Wednesday on billionaire Elon Musk’s claim the central bank is bloated when he was asked it them during a press conference.

    Elon Musk, the leader of President Donald Trump’s Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), wrote in a post on X last month, “The Fed is absurdly overstaffed.”

    Powell was asked about those remarks by FOX Business’ Edward Lawrence at a press conference after the central bank’s announcement it would hold interest rates steady.

    “We run a very careful budget process where we’re fully aware. We owe that to the public, and we believe we do that. I’ve got no further comment on that, thanks,” Powell responded.

    FEDERAL RESERVE HOLDS INTEREST RATES STEADY AMID INFLATION UNCERTAINTY

    Fed Chair Jerome Powell said the central bank has a careful budgeting process. (Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images / Getty Images)

    Powell and the Fed have faced political criticism from Musk before. 

    In May, Musk posted that the “Fed has a crazy high number of employees.”

    The billionaire CEO of Tesla and SpaceX also said last summer the Fed was too slow in cutting interest rates, writing on X in August that the Fed “needs to drop rates” and has been “foolish not to have done so already.”

    ELON MUSK’S DOGE MAKES ANOTHER HIRING PUSH

    Elon Musk

    Elon Musk has criticized Powell and the Fed multiple times. (Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    The Fed cut interest rates at its meeting in September for the first time since March 2020 as inflation cooled from a 40-year high it reached in June 2022. 

    The central bank cut the benchmark federal funds rate by 50 basis points in September, followed by smaller 25 basis point cuts in November and December, before pausing this month amid economic uncertainty.

    DOGE, which President Donald Trump officially established via executive order upon his return to the White House last week, aims to slash government waste and provide increased transparency with government spending.

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    Some of the cuts proposed by Musk include simplifying the U.S. tax code, auditing the Pentagon, ending federal employees’ remote work, reevaluating expired congressional programs, modernizing IT systems and protecting federal healthcare and Social Security benefits, to name a few.

    FOX Business’ Breck Dumas contributed to this report.

  • Trump Commerce secretary pick vows to sell all his business interests if confirmed

    Trump Commerce secretary pick vows to sell all his business interests if confirmed

    President Donald Trump’s nominee for secretary of Commerce, billionaire Howard Lutnick, says he will sell all of his business interests if confirmed in order to prevent any conflicts of interest. 

    Howard Lutnick testifies during his Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation confirmation hearing on Jan. 29, 2025, in Washington, D.C. (Kayla Bartkowski/Getty Images)

    “My plan is to only serve the American people. So I will divest – meaning I will sell all of my interests, all of my business interests, all of my assets, everything,” Lutnick, the CEO of investment firm Cantor Fitzgeral said during his confirmation hearing on Wednesday before the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation.

    HOWARD LUTNICK, TRUMP COMMERCE SECRETARY PICK, SAYS IT’S ‘NONSENSE’ THAT TARIFFS CAUSE INFLATION

    “I’ve worked together with the Office of Government Ethics, and we’ve reached agreement on how to do that, and I will be divesting within 90 days upon my confirmation,” he told the committee. “So I should have no business interests, therefore no conflicts of interest.”

    Howard Lutnick on markets and economy

    Howard Lutnick has vowed to divest all his business holdings within 90 days if he is confirmed to lead the Commerce Department. (Christopher Goodney/Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    Lutnick’s pledge would be no small feat to carry out. The Associated Press noted that his financial disclosures show he has positions at more than 800 businesses and other private entities.

    PRESIDENT TRUMP, HIS ADMINISTRATION AND CONGRESSIONAL LEADERS: THEIR SALARIES

    Lutnick, 63, joined Cantor Fitzgerald fresh out of college and has led the firm since 1991. But he said it will be time to pass the baton if he is confirmed to lead the Commerce Department.

    Trump and Lutnick

    Donald Trump, then the Republican presidential nominee, and Cantor Fitzgerald CEO Howard Lutnick attend Annual Charity Day hosted by Cantor Fitzgerald on Sept. 12, 2016, in New York City.

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    “I made the decision that I’ve made enough money in my life. I can take care of myself. I can take care of my family,” Lutnick told the committee, adding, “It is now my chance to serve the American people. And so, upon confirmation, my businesses will be for sale and someone else will lead them going forward.”

  • Trump blasts Fed, Jerome Powell for not cutting interest rates

    Trump blasts Fed, Jerome Powell for not cutting interest rates

    President Donald Trump unleashed on the Federal Reserve and Chair Jerome Powell on Wednesday, after the central bank decided to hold interest rates steady rather than making a cut, as the president had wanted.

    “Because Jay Powell and the Fed failed to stop the problem they created with Inflation, I will do it by unleashing American Energy production, slashing Regulation, rebalancing International Trade, and reigniting American Manufacturing, but I will do much more than stopping Inflation, I will make our Country financially, and otherwise, powerful again!” Trump wrote on Truth Social.

    President Donald Trump  (CHIP SOMODEVILLA/POOL/AFP via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    “The Fed has done a terrible job on Bank Regulation,” the president continued. “Treasury is going to lead the effort to cut unnecessary Regulation, and will unleash lending for all American people and businesses. If the Fed had spent less time on DEI, gender ideology, ‘green energy, and fake climate change, Inflation would never have been a problem. Instead, we suffered from the worst Inflation in the History of our Country!”

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    This is a developing story. Check back for updates.

  • RFK JR. grilled on Medicare: What is Medicare Part A, Medicare Part B and Medicaid? What are they?

    RFK JR. grilled on Medicare: What is Medicare Part A, Medicare Part B and Medicaid? What are they?

    Robert F. Kennedy Jr. was grilled by senators over ideas for reforming Medicaid and Medicare on Wednesday during his first confirmation hearing as President Donald Trump’s nominee to become the next secretary of Health and Human Services.

    In this role, RFK Jr. would have authority over the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) as well as the National Institutes of Health and the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), which is responsible for the Medicare and Medicaid programs. Dr. Mehmet Oz was nominated by Trump to run the CMS. 

    During the Wednesday hearing, Kennedy told senators that “Medicaid is not working for Americans.” 

    “It’s specifically not working for the target population,” he said. 

    Kennedy said the premiums and deductibles are too high, the “networks are narrow,” and the best doctors and healthcare systems don’t accept it. 

    FEDERAL JUDGE PAUSES TRUMP ADMIN’S TEMPORARY FEDERAL GRANTS, LOANS FREEZE

    Medicaid, originally designed for the poorest Americans, has been “dramatically expanded,” leading to increased financial pressures on that population, he said.

    Robert F. Kennedy Jr. takes his seat during his Senate Finance Committee confirmation hearing on Jan. 29, 2025, in Washington, D.C. (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images / Getty Images)

    “The irony of the expansion is that the poorest Americans are now being robbed,” he continued. 

    A patient waits in a room at a doctor's office.

    A patient waits in a room at a doctor’s office. (  / iStock)

    In terms of Medicare, Kennedy believes more people would rather be on Medicare Advantage “because it offers very good services” but it’s too expensive. 

    When asked what reforms he would recommend to improve service and make it more cost-effective, Kennedy said there are “many things” we can do but stopped short of offering specifics. He said the ultimate goal is to increase transparency and accountability as well as “transition into a value-based system rather than a fee-based system.” 

    What to know about Medicare Part A, Medicare Part B, Medicare Advantage and Medicaid: 

    Medicare 

    Medicare is health insurance for people who are at least 65 years old. It is also for certain individuals under 65 that have disabilities and conditions. There are various plans within Medicare. When you sign up for Medicare, you can choose which way to get your Medicare coverage. 

    FACT OR FICTION: WILL TRUMP’S FEDERAL FUNDING FREEZE IMPACT STUDENT LOANS, GRANTS?

    There are two main options for consumers. One is original Medicare, which includes Part A and Part B, or Medicare Advantage (also known as Part C). 

    Doctor prescription medication medicine patient

    A doctor writes a prescription for a patient. (  / iStock)

    Medicare Part A 

    Part A, otherwise known as hospital insurance, helps cover inpatient care in hospitals, skilled nursing facility care, hospice care and home health care, according to the CMS. 

    Medicare Part B 

    It is medical insurance that covers services from doctors and other healthcare providers, outpatient care, home healthcare and durable medical equipment such as wheelchairs, walkers, hospital beds, and other equipment. It will also cover many preventive services such as screenings, shots or vaccines, and yearly “Wellness” visits, according to CMS. 

    You can use Medicare Part A and Part B at any doctor or hospital that takes Medicare in the U.S. Consumers can also buy supplemental coverage that helps pay for their out-of-pocket costs. 

    Medicare Part D

    It helps cover the cost of prescription drugs and includes many recommended shots or vaccines. However, consumers have to add this plan in order to get Medicare drug coverage.

    Medicare Advantage 

    It is a Medicare-approved plan from a private company that offers an alternative to original Medicare for your health and drug coverage. It is known as Part C and usually bundles Part A, Part B, and usually Part D plans. 

    Typically, this has different out-of-pocket costs than original Medicare or supplemental coverage like Medigap, which is supplemental insurance consumers can buy from a private company that helps pay your share of costs in original Medicare.

    With Part C, consumers may also have an additional premium, according to CMS. 

    RFK Jr testifies

    Robert F. Kennedy Jr. testifies during his Senate Finance Committee confirmation hearing on Jan. 29, 2025, in Washington, D.C. (Win McNamee / Getty Images)

    However, the plans may offer benefits that Original Medicare doesn’t.

    Medicaid 

    This is a joint federal and state program designed to provide health coverage for individuals with limited income and resources. It offers benefits such as nursing home care, personal care services, and help with paying Medicare premiums and other costs. 

    The state will pay your monthly premiums, and depending on the level of Medicaid eligibility, it may also cover Medicare costs, such as deductibles, coinsurance and copayments. In some cases, it could also cover Part A premiums, according to CMS.

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    Recipients will also receive assistance with prescription costs. Medicaid may cover medications and services that Medicare doesn’t, as noted by CMS.

    However, each state has different rules around who’s eligible for this program. To qualify, you must meet your state’s rules for your income and resources, in addition to other rules such as being a resident of the state. 

    However, sometimes a state will offer loopholes. For instance, some states will let a consumer “spend down” the amount of their income that’s above the state’s Medicaid limit. 

  • Federal Reserve holds interest rates steady amid inflation uncertainty

    Federal Reserve holds interest rates steady amid inflation uncertainty

    The Federal Reserve on Wednesday announced that it will leave interest rates unchanged amid uncertainty about inflation and economic conditions.

    The Fed’s decision leaves the benchmark federal funds rate at a range of 4.25% to 4.5% and follows three consecutive interest rate cuts at the central bank’s most recent meetings – including a 50-basis-point cut in September as well as a pair of 25-basis-point reductions in November and December.

    “Recent indicators suggest that economic activity has continued to expand at a solid pace,” wrote members of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC), the group responsible for guiding the Fed’s monetary policy. “The unemployment rate has stabilized at a low level in recent months, and labor market conditions remain solid. Inflation remains somewhat elevated.”

    The FOMC statement said that the Fed continues to pursue its dual mandate of achieving maximum employment and inflation at 2% over the longer run. It added that the “economic outlook is uncertain, and the Committee is attentive to risks to both sides of its dual mandate.”

    FOMC members were unanimous in the decision to leave rates unchanged at this time. The committee’s statement added that policymakers “would be prepared to adjust the stance of monetary policy as appropriate if risks emerge that could impede the attainment of the Committee’s goals” and that it will consider a range of information including labor market data, inflation pressures and expectations, as well as financial and international developments as it considers its next move.

    Fed Chair Jerome Powell will outline the central bank’s decision at a press conference where he will likely face questions about how policymakers view the impact of President Donald Trump’s economic agenda. He may also face questions about whether they considered his call for lower interest rates in their decision.

    This is a developing story. Please check back for updates.

  • Some Wegmans frozen chicken nuggets contaminated with bone fragments says FSIS

    Some Wegmans frozen chicken nuggets contaminated with bone fragments says FSIS

    Some frozen Wegmans chicken nuggets may be contaminated with bone fragments, the Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS) warned in a Monday public health alert. 

    The public health alert about the “possible extraneous material contamination” comes just a handful of days after a recall of the potentially-affected 46-ounce packages of Wegmans Family Pack Fully Cooked Breaded Chicken Breast with Rib Meat nuggets by New York-based grocery store chain. The nuggets, made in late August of last year, are not on store shelves. 

    The Wegmans logo outside their Astor Place grocery store on Oct. 28, 2023, in New York City. (Gary Hershorn/Getty Images / Getty Images)

    The FSIS said it released the public health alert to “ensure that consumers are aware that this product should not be consumed.”  

    The potentially contaminated Wegmans chicken nugget packages can be identified by a best-by date of Aug. 26, 2025, and the establishment number “P-33944,” according to the health agency housed within the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

    COCA-COLA ISSUES EUROPEAN SAFETY RECALL OVER ‘EXCESSIVELY HIGH CHLORATE CONTENT’

    “FSIS is concerned that some product may be in consumers’ freezers,” the alert said. “Consumers who have purchased this product are urged to not consume it. This product should be thrown away or returned to the place of purchase.” 

    FOX Business reached out to the grocery store chain for comment. 

    LAY’S RECALL OF CLASSIC CHIPS IN 2 STATES CLASSIFIED AT HIGHEST RISK LEVEL, FDA WARNS IT COULD CAUSE ‘DEATH’

    No consumers have reported injuries from eating the Wegmans chicken nuggets. However, Wegmans has fielded “multiple” complaints from consumers about finding pieces of bone, the FSIS said. 

    The grocery store chain said on its website that it will give a full refund to consumers that return packages of the potentially contaminated chicken nuggets. 

    POPULAR FROZEN MEAL SOLD AT ALDI RECALLED ACROSS 31 STATES FOR METAL CONTAMINATION: ‘DISCARD IS IMMEDIATELY’

    Wegmans stores in eight states – Delaware, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Virginia – received the affected nugget packages when they were available, per the FSIS. The District of Columbia did as well. 

    wegmans store

    A couple is seen at the parking lot of a Wegmans supermarket in Williamsport, Pennsylvania, Nov. 21, 2022. (Paul Weaver/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    The privately held company operates 111 stores up and down the East Coast. It employs over 54,000 people and generates some $12.5 billion in sales annually, according to its website. 

  • Costco board members donated hundreds of thousands to Democrats in 2024 cycle

    Costco board members donated hundreds of thousands to Democrats in 2024 cycle

    Costco’s chairman of the board donated hundreds of thousands of dollars to Democrats in the last election cycle, and multiple other board members heavily donated to Democrats as well, according to data from the Federal Elections Commission. 

    The grocery wholesaler is grappling with a public backlash after the board overwhelmingly came out in favor of the company’s controversial DEI policies. 

    Chairman of the Board Hamilton E. James gave $100,000 to the Harris Action Fund in May 2023. Hamilton, who was formerly with the Blackstone group, donated $150,000 to the Harris Victory Fund in Oct. 2024, FEC data reveals. 

    The Costco chairman donated $250,000 to the Senate Majority PAC, a political action committee dedicated to electing Democrats to the Senate, and gave $100,000 to the House Majority Pac, which works to elect Democratic candidates to the House of Representatives, between Sept. and Oct. 2024. 

    COSTCO BOARD MEMBER DEFENDS DEI PRACTICES, REBUKES COMPANIES SCRAPPING POLICIES

    Costco board members donated heavily to Democrats in the 2023-24 election cycle. (Justin Sullivan/Getty Images / Getty Images)

    Hamilton, 73, donated $41,000 to the PAC for Rep. Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., called the Jeffries Victory Fund in Sept. 2024, among numerous other Democratic PACs, federal data reveals, and made donations to numerous state Democratic parties and committees.

    Costco board member and former CEO of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, Jeff Raikes, appears to be one of the more prolific donors among the board, giving over $400,000 to Democratic candidates and causes in the last two years. On October 28, 2024, Raikes gave $25,000 to the Harris Victory Fund, just days before the presidential election. A month earlier, he gave $25,000 to the House Majority PAC.

    Costco board member Kenneth Denman made numerous donations to left-wing candidates and groups as well. In the lead-up to the 2024 presidential election, Denman made two $2,500 donations to Harris for President in one week, on Oct. 20 and Oct. 26.

    Sally Jewell, who has sat on Costco’s board since 2020 and served in the Obama administration as secretary of the interior, made 49 contributions in support of Democratic candidates between January 2023 and December 2024. She gave thousands to groups supporting the campaigns of Democrats across the country, including former Pennsylvania Sen. Bob Casey and former Montana Sen. Jon Tester.

    Director Helena Buonanno Foulkes gave $3,300 to Harris for President and $3,500 to the Harris Victory Fund in August, and donated in support of Democratic Senators Amy Klobuchar, Tammy Baldwin, and Bob Casey. Foulkes is the niece of former Democratic Connecticut Sen. Christopher Dodd, and she made an unsuccessful bid for the Democratic nomination for governor of Rhode Island in 2022.

    Of the Costco board members that Fox News Digital could independently verify, only John Stanton gave to Republican-aligned PACs. Stanton donated to PACs supporting Republican Sens. John Thune of South Dakota and Sen. John Barrasso of Wyoming, and he also contributed to Michigan Rep. John James. He also donated to a Washington Democrat, Rep. Adam Smith, last cycle. 

    None of the other board members appeared to have donated to Republicans or right-wing PACs. According to their website, Costco’s board currently consists of 11 members. The remaining members did not appear to make individual political donations in the 2024 cycle, or could not be verified to have done so, according to the FEC’s website.

    COSTCO SHAREHOLDERS REJECT ANTI-DEI MEASURE

    Raikes

    Costco board member Jeff Raikes has been an outspoken advocate for DEI.  (Getty Images)

    The significant left-wing political contributions among Costco’s board members come in light of a raging controversy over the wholesale grocer’s DEI policies. Nineteen state attorneys general urged the grocery wholesaler to drop DEI on Monday in light of President Donald Trump’s executive orders purging it from the federal government. 

    Raikes has been an outspoken supporter of DEI. In November 2024 he wrote, “Attacks on DEI aren’t just bad for business—they hurt our economy. A diverse workforce drives innovation, expands markets, and fuels growth. Let’s focus on building a future where all talent thrives,” in a post on X.

    Donald Trump and Larry Ellison

    Larry Ellison, Executive Charmain Oracle listens to US President Donald Trump speak in the Roosevelt Room at the White House on January 21, 2025, in Washington, DC. (JIM WATSON/AFP via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    Denman frequently reposts criticisms of Trump and praise for Democrats on his X and Bluesky accounts. 

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    The company’s founder, James Sinegal, who retired from his executive position in 2012, was a staunch supporter of the Democratic Party. He spoke at the Democratic National Convention in 2012 as a backer of President Barack Obama.

    Fox News Digital reached out to the board members who donated in the 2024 election cycle and have yet to receive a response. Jewell, James, Stanton was unable to be reached. 

  • Alibaba releases AI model it says rivals DeepSeek, OpenAI, Meta’s top models

    Alibaba releases AI model it says rivals DeepSeek, OpenAI, Meta’s top models

    Chinese tech giant Alibaba is flexing its muscles in the global race for artificial intelligence (AI) dominance, claiming the latest version of its Qwen 2.5 can take on the top models from rivals both foreign and domestic.

    Not to be outdone by the attention surrounding fellow Chinese firm DeepSeek – which rocked the U.S. tech sector this week with its purported emergence as a potential rival to leading American AI companies – Alibaba says its latest offering is superior to them all in nearly every measure.

    Alibaba claimed the latest version of its Qwen 2.5 can take on the top models from rivals both foreign and domestic. (Thomas Peter / Reuters Photos)

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    BABA ALIBABA GROUP HOLDING LTD. 97.98 +1.92 +1.99%

    Alibaba Holding Group Ltd — ADR

    “Qwen 2.5-Max outperforms… almost across the board GPT-4o, DeepSeek-V3 and Llama-3.1-405B,” Alibaba’s cloud unit said in an announcement posted on its official WeChat account, referring to OpenAI and Meta’s most advanced open-source AI models.

    TECH MOGUL DOUBTS DEEPSEEK CLAIMS, SAYS US MEDIA FELL FOR ‘CCP PROPAGANDA’

    Alibaba’s Qwen account on X posted stats indicating how the model stacks up against its competitors, claiming, “It achieves competitive performance against the top-tier models, and outcompetes DeepSeek V3 in benchmarks like Arena Hard, LiveBench, LiveCodeBench, GPQA-Diamond.”

    The unusual timing of the Qwen 2.5-Max’s release, on the first day of the Lunar New Year when most Chinese people are off work and with their families, points to the pressure Chinese AI startup DeepSeek’s meteoric rise in the past three weeks has placed on not just overseas rivals, but also its domestic competition.

    TRUMP, OPENAI CEO WEIGH IN ON DEEPSEEK FRENZY

    The Jan. 10 release of DeepSeek’s AI assistant, powered by the DeepSeek-V3 model, as well as the Jan. 20 release of its R1 model, has shocked Silicon Valley and caused tech shares to plunge, with the Chinese startup’s purportedly low development and usage costs prompting investors to question huge spending plans by leading AI firms in the U.S.

    But DeepSeek’s success has also led to a scramble among its domestic competitors to upgrade their own AI models.

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    Two days after the release of DeepSeek-R1, TikTok owner ByteDance released an update to its flagship AI model, which it claimed outperformed Microsoft-backed OpenAI’s o1 in AIME, a benchmark test that measures how well AI models understand and respond to complex instructions.

    This echoed DeepSeek’s claim that its R1 model rivaled OpenAI’s o1 on several performance benchmarks.

    Reuters contributed to this report.