Elizabeth Warren asks Meta, Amazon, and others why they're laying workers off despite tax perks
Source: Yahoo! Finance
Updated Mon, March 16, 2026 at 1:18 PM EDT
Democratic Sen. Elizabeth Warren is grilling several major employers, including Amazon (AMZN), Target (TGT), and UPS (UPS), about their recent spate of layoffs.
In letters sent Sunday to the executives of Microsoft (MSFT), Amazon, Home Depot (HD), Meta (META), Nike (NKE), Verizon (VZ), Target, and UPS, Warren asked the companies to detail by March 30 how much of a tax cut they received in 2025 following President Trump's One Big Beautiful Bill Act, whether they anticipated any tariff refunds, and whether they made any contributions to Trump's projects, among other queries.
Combined, the companies account for tens of thousands of lost positions in the past several months. Due to current economic conditions, "newly laid off workers could be forced to take lower-paying jobs if they are able to find employment at all," Warren wrote.
While the overall layoff rate remains near historically low levels, any worker cast out of a job right now has to contend with one of the most strained labor markets in years. That's thanks to few new jobs being added, few workers quitting their current positions, and fierce competition for entry-level jobs even among experienced professionals. Warren questioned why the companies laid off workers even after last summer's sweeping tax law bestowed new benefits for corporations.
Read more: https://finance.yahoo.com/news/elizabeth-warren-asks-meta-amazon-and-others-why-theyre-laying-workers-off-despite-tax-perks-171812502.html?fr=sycsrp_catchall
Link to Sen. Warren PRESS RELEASE - Warren Probes Meta, Microsoft, Target, Companies on Mass Layoffs Despite Strong Financials and Trump Tax Handouts
Link to LETTER (inquiry) (PDF) - https://www.warren.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/letters_to_ceos_re_layoffs.pdf
Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin
(135,193 posts)Not saying it's right.
OC375
(831 posts)Anti-trust their tail ends.
Brother Buzz
(39,851 posts)rubbersole
(11,186 posts)Best investment they've ever made.
Aussie105
(7,854 posts)I imagine trade in the discretionary spending sector has dropped off greatly.
I'd like to see the numbers on how much business trade Microsoft, Amazon, Home Depot, etc have lost.
Business down, so working people get the boot.
thought crime
(1,507 posts)Answer: because they can.
And they really don't care about the question.
betsuni
(29,017 posts)Thank you, Elizabeth Warren!
BumRushDaShow
(168,971 posts)and REQUESTS FOR INFORMATION, where the recipient(s) is/are given a DUE DATE to respond. If the response was inadequate or clarifications were needed, a follow-up request would be sent.
I know during my federal career, when someone from Congress sent a request to our agency, the panic button was pushed and an "ALL HANDS" / "ALL EMPLOYEES" notice would be sent out for anyone who had something "responsive" to the request, should provide our supervisors with that for compiling. Eventually all the compiled stuff would be boxed up and shipped to our HQ.
In the "old days", it came as a FAX and one of the secretaries would make photocopies of it for each Branch and would attach a "buck slip" on it to get it distributed around to each supervisory group (where each person would initial that they received/read and would pass it on among their colleagues). In some instances, it would go in one of those distribution envelope thingies -

In the "later days", after we got a LAN and email, it would be sent as an "ALL EMPLOYEES" email.