US aviation large Boeing has instructed BBC News it is going to donate $1 million (£812,600) to a fund for President-elect Donald Trump’s inauguration.
Google additionally confirmed it has made an identical donation as the 2 firms be a part of a rising checklist of main American firms contributing to the fund.
The checklist additionally contains oil producer Chevron and tech giants Meta, Amazon and Uber.
Trump’s inauguration, which is able to mark the beginning of his second time period within the White House, will happen on January 20.
“We are happy to proceed Boeing’s bipartisan custom of supporting U.S. presidential inaugural committees,” Boeing mentioned.
The firm added that it has made related donations to every of the three presidential inauguration funds.
Boeing is working to get better from a security and high quality management disaster, in addition to take care of losses stemming from final yr’s strike.
The firm can be constructing the following presidential aircraft, often called Air Force One. The two jets are anticipated to enter service as early as subsequent yr.
During his first time period as president, Trump pressured the aircraft maker to renegotiate the contract, calling the preliminary deal too costly.
Google grew to become the newest main tech firm to donate to the fund, following related bulletins from Meta and Amazon. It additionally mentioned it is going to stream the occasion world wide.
“Google is happy to assist the 2025 inauguration, with a dwell stream on YouTube and a direct hyperlink on our homepage,” mentioned Karan Bhatia, world head of presidency affairs and public coverage at Google.
Automakers Ford, General Motors and Toyota additionally donated $1 million every to the inaugural committee.
In the power sector, Chevron confirmed it had made a donation to the fund, however declined to specify the quantity.
“Chevron has an extended historical past of celebrating democracy by supporting the inaugural committees of each events. We are proud to take action once more this yr,” mentioned Bill Turene, Chevron’s head of worldwide media relations.