How Home Depot cashed in on Trump’s tax handouts—and helped ICE track, detain, and deport families.

$111 million
Based on SEC proxy statements, Edward Decker, CEO of Home Depot, received an estimated cumulative ordinary income of $111 million from 2018 through 2024.
$2.9 million
From this estimate his personal tax cut from the 2017 Trump-GOP tax law could be $2.9 million over that same period, just from the reduced top tax bracket.

Over that same period (2018 to 2024) the CEO’s total pay, counting unrealized income and non-taxable benefits, was
464 times more
than the median Home Depot worker’s salary over those same seven years.

The collective compensation (excluding vested stock and exercised options) of the top five Home Depot executives from 2018 to 2024 was
$251 million

In the four years before the 2017 Trump-GOP tax law was enacted Home Depot paid an average effective tax rate of 34% on an average annual domestic profit of
$9.6 billion
In the seven years following that tax law’s enactment, Home Depot has paid an average effective tax rate of
20%
on an average annual domestic profit of $16.6 billion.
That change is equivalent to an annual tax cut for Home Depot of
$2.2 billion
per year.

Over the last 12 years (2013 to 2024), Home Depot spent $65 billion on dividends and $82 billion on stock buybacks.
Home Depot has appeared to be collaborating with Trump’s ICE mass immigration sweeps on their property, putting thousands of customers and employees' safety at risk.

Home Depot has spent over
$17 million
influencing federal elections through campaign donations over the last decade.

It also spent
$24 million
lobbying members of Congress on legislation during that same time period.
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