Trump to halt law banning bribery of foreign officials

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Donald Trump has ordered the Department of Justice to halt the enforcement of a US anti-corruption law that bars Americans from bribing foreign government officials to win business.

“It’s going to mean a lot more business for America,” the president said in the Oval Office after signing an executive order on Monday directing Pam Bondi, the US attorney-general, to pause enforcement of the 1977 Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.

A White House official said: “American national security depends on America and its companies gaining strategic commercial advantages around the world, and President Trump is stopping excessive, unpredictable FCPA enforcement that makes American companies less competitive.”

The order marks one of the boldest enforcement policies issued by Trump’s administration, potentially undermining a critical tool in cracking down on individual as well as corporate misconduct. 

The FCPA has underpinned some of the DoJ’s most high-profile cases, including a plea agreement it reached last year with Trafigura over bribes the commodities trading house made in Brazil to retain business with state-controlled oil company Petrobras.

In 2022, one of McKinsey’s former senior partners pleaded guilty to participating in a conspiracy to violate the FCPA in relation to a sprawling corruption scandal during the administration of former South African president Jacob Zuma.

And last October, US defence contractor RTX agreed to pay more than $950mn over claims it bribed a Qatari official to facilitate arms sales to the country and defrauded the Pentagon into overpaying for weapons, including Patriot missile systems.

The White House official said Bondi would issue new enforcement guidance that “promotes American competitiveness and efficient use of federal law enforcement resources”, adding that previous and existing FCPA actions would be reviewed. 

US companies were damaged by “over-enforcement” of the act since “they are prohibited from engaging in practices common among international competitors, creating an uneven playing field”, the official added.

The White House said US national security requires strategic advantages in various infrastructure assets, such as critical minerals and deep-water ports. 

FCPA prosecutions had imposed “a growing cost on our nation’s economy”, said the official, citing the 26 enforcement actions related to the law filed by the justice department and Securities and Exchange Commission last year.

Having dozens of enforcement actions each year drained resources from companies and law enforcement, the official said. Thirty-one companies were under FCPA-related investigations at the end of 2024, they added.

The DoJ did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

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