Senator Elizabeth Warren is really putting the heat on some major employers, demanding answers about the big tax breaks they received during the Trump administration before their recent waves of mass layoffs. She’s sent letters to the executives of companies like Amazon, Microsoft, Home Depot, Meta, Nike, Verizon, Target, and UPS, wanting them to spill the details by March 30, as reported by Yahoo Finance.
Warren specifically wants to know how much of a tax cut these companies snagged in 2025 thanks to President Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act. She’s also asking if they’re expecting any tariff refunds and if they made any contributions to President Trump’s projects, among other serious questions.
These companies combined have shed tens of thousands of jobs over the last several months. As Warren pointed out, with current economic conditions, “newly laid off workers could be forced to take lower-paying jobs — if they are able to find employment at all.”
Even though the overall layoff rate is still pretty low historically, anyone who gets the boot right now faces one of the most strained labor markets in years
We’re seeing fewer new jobs pop up, not many folks are quitting their current positions, and there’s some seriously fierce competition for even entry-level roles, with experienced professionals often vying for them. What really seems to be bugging Warren is why these companies are laying off workers after benefiting so much from last summer’s sweeping tax law.
For instance, Meta reportedly “paid an effective federal income tax rate of just over 3.5 percent in 2025,” according to Matt Gardner at the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy. That’s the lowest tax rate Meta has recorded since it went public as Facebook back in 2012. Adding fuel to the fire, there have been reports that Meta is considering cutting up to 20% of its workforce. Meta laid off about 600 employees in its AI unit last year.
Warren didn’t hold back in her letter to Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg, writing, “The sequence of events behind these layoffs — which come after your company enjoyed huge tax breaks from President Trump’s tax law and earned record profits last year — raises questions about the rationale for the job cuts, and whether they represent another example of unchecked corporate greed emboldened by the Trump administration.”
A spokesperson for Meta responded to the letter, saying it was “based on speculative reporting about theoretical approaches.” It sounds like they’re trying to downplay the concerns, but the scrutiny is definitely there. Other companies mentioned in Warren’s letters didn’t immediately comment.
The reasons companies are giving for their layoffs are pretty varied. Some are pointing to productivity gains they’re seeing from AI, which is a common narrative in the tech world these days. Others are admitting to corporate bloat. Then you have companies like Amazon, which announced 16,000 layoffs in January, citing efforts to reduce bureaucracy. UPS is cutting a whopping 30,000 positions this year, explaining that these cuts are part of their plan to reduce deliveries for Amazon.
Published: Mar 18, 2026 04:45 pm