US President Donald Trump speaks about TrumpRx website as the Administrator for the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services Mehmet Oz listens, in the South Court Auditorium of the White House in Washington, DC, on February 5, 2026.

Drug companies involved in TrumpRx boosted lobbying by 23% ahead of program鈥檚 launch

May 11, 2026
Updated on May 13, 2026
SAUL LOEB // AFP via Getty Images

Drug companies involved in TrumpRx boosted lobbying by 23% ahead of program鈥檚 launch

The 17 pharmaceutical companies anchoring TrumpRx, the White House鈥檚 new prescription drug-pricing program, poured more than $130 million into federal lobbying in 2025 鈥 a nearly 23% surge that outpaced the broader industry as the plan was being shaped behind the scenes.

Those companies accounted for more than a quarter of the record $457.3 million spent on lobbying last year . And while newly filed 2026 first-quarter reports show no slowdown 鈥 industry-wide spending topped $131 million, a 5.7% year-over-year increase 鈥 the most consequential lobbying push came in 2025, ahead of TrumpRx鈥檚 February launch.

鈥淎ll I can say is that they鈥檙e spending a ton of money,鈥 Olivier Wouters, an associate professor at Brown University who has , told .

in President Donald Trump鈥檚 flagship 鈥渕ost favored nation鈥 drug-pricing initiative, the 2025 spending spree was nearly universal: 15 increased their year-over-year totals, and eight 鈥 including Regeneron, which didn鈥檛 join 鈥 boosted spending by at least 25%, an escalation that coincided with the plan鈥檚 final negotiations.

The two companies with the steepest increases market blockbuster medications that saw deep price cuts in 2026.

Bristol Myers Squibb, maker of the anti-clotting drug Eliquis, 鈥 an 84% jump to more than $10 million, one of the sharpest increases by any company in any sector. The surge came as Eliquis, which generated in 2024, became subject to a , dropping to $231 for a 30-day supply.

And hiked its federal lobbying spending by more than 55% to nearly $5.8 million as the negotiated price of its diabetes and heart- and kidney-disease drug Farxiga 鈥 an in 2025 鈥 68% to $178.50 under the Inflation Reduction Act.

Image
A data bar chart showing the top 17 pharmaceutical companies that took part in the White House's discount prescription drug program.
OpenSecrets


TrumpRx offers brand-name drug discounts indexed to lower international prices. In exchange for offering these most-favored-nation rates to cash-paying customers, the administration granted participating drugmakers multi-year exemptions from new import tariffs.

Citing national security concerns, Trump imposing a 100% tariff on imported patented drugs and pharmaceutical ingredients from countries without a qualifying security agreement. The proclamation also created a carve-out for companies that enter most-favored-nation pricing and onshoring agreements 鈥 core components of the TrumpRx platform 鈥 allowing them to pay a 0% tariff through Jan. 20, 2029, a concession potentially worth billions.

Another function of the program allows manufacturers to sell high-volume medications, including popular GLP-1 weight-loss drugs, directly to patients while bypassing insurance gatekeepers.

Health care has long dominated Washington鈥檚 K Street, as the lobbying industry is known. In 2025, 2,632 clients lobbied health-related issues 鈥 breaking the 2021 record of 2,624, according to . Federal lobbying reports do not indicate whether a company supported or opposed a bill, or how much of its total spending was directed toward an issue.

Omer Unsal, an associate professor at Merrimack College who has studied , said he鈥檚 seeing steady growth across the board: more money being spent, more bills being lobbied, and more 鈥渞evolving door鈥 lobbyists cycling in from positions in government.

鈥淥verall, the trend is upward, and I think there has to be some benefit in exchange for those lobbying expenditures,鈥 Unsal said.

Twelve of the industry鈥檚 top 15 spenders were among those firms, including Genentech, which accounted for $10.4 million of the $11.4 million spent by parent company Roche Holdings. However, these firms were already among the industry鈥檚 biggest spenders 鈥 in 2024 鈥 and simply increased their totals in 2025.

In all, the 17 firms spent nearly $134 million on federal lobbying in 2025 鈥 up almost 23% from $109 million the year before, outpacing the industry鈥檚 15% increase.

That tally does not include the industry鈥檚 leading trade group, the Pharmaceutical Research & Manufacturers of America, which represents many of the same companies. PhRMA spent a record $38.2 million in 2025 鈥 trailing 鈥 and lobbied on 73 separate pieces of legislation. Its disclosure reports include dozens of references to most-favored-nation drug pricing.

A directed federal agencies to implement most-favored-nation pricing 鈥 an effort to force U.S. prices down to levels seen in other developed nations. PhRMA has publicly opposed such mandates, calling them a 鈥溾 that imports prices from 鈥渟ocialist countries,鈥 even as TrumpRx has become the administration鈥檚 primary voluntary channel for companies to adopt those prices in exchange for trade concessions. After the 2022 passage of the Inflation Reduction Act 鈥 which allowed Medicare to negotiate prescription-drug prices 鈥 three companies, including AbbVie and AstraZeneca, . AstraZeneca rejoined last year.

Several other companies are represented by another trade group, the Biotechnology Innovation Organization. However, companies including Pfizer, AbbVie and GSK left in recent years, and the group鈥檚 lobbying spending fell sharply 鈥 to $5.6 million in 2025, a decrease of nearly 58% in four years.

鈥淭he pharmaceutical industry is dominated by large companies,鈥 Unsal said. 鈥淭he larger the company, the more resources you have to lobby. But eventually, it goes back to how much government benefit you receive in exchange [for] your lobbying.鈥

The 鈥榩ill penalty鈥 fight

The TrumpRx coalition placed significant lobbying attention on a pair of bills targeting how Medicare negotiates prices.

Small-molecule drugs 鈥 typically pills or capsules 鈥 become eligible for price negotiation four years earlier than biologics, which are derived from living organisms and often treat complex or rare diseases. The Ensuring Pathways to Innovative Cures Act would eliminate that disparity, giving drugmakers an additional four years before negotiations can begin.

Calling the current structure a 鈥,鈥 Rep. Greg Murphy (R-N.C.), a urologist, introduced the version. Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) sponsored .

How frequently a bill or issue appears is often a signal of a company鈥檚 priorities. In this case, 13 of the drugmakers lobbied the House version. Eight also lobbied the Senate version. Together, the bills were referenced in 117 quarterly disclosures filed by TrumpRx-aligned companies. PhRMA mentioned them 75 additional times.

Novartis 鈥 whose portfolio includes small-molecule drugs such as Kisqali (breast cancer) and Scemblix (leukemia) 鈥 was the most active, 24 total reports.

鈥淭hat makes sense to me, that [drugmakers are] going after that quite aggressively as well, because they are the ones that have a more material impact on revenues, right?鈥 Wouters said. 鈥淚鈥檓 not a lobbyist, but you have to pick your battles, and so you鈥檙e going to go after the bills that really hit you where it hurts.鈥

The GLP-1 lobbying boom

Two of those drugmakers also focused heavily on legislation affecting their most popular, and lucrative, products: GLP-1 drugs often used to help with weight loss.

Eli Lilly & Co. 鈥 maker of Mounjaro, Zepbound and the newly approved Foundayo pill 鈥 increased its lobbying spending nearly 33% in 2025 to $11.2 million. Novo Nordisk, which produces Wegovy and Ozempic, hiked its spending by more than 37% to over $7.23 million.

Both companies lobbied the , which would allow Medicare Part D to cover weight-loss drugs, specifically those GLP-1s. Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-La.), a gastroenterologist who chairs the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, sponsored the Senate version; Rep. Mike Kelly (R-Pa.) sponsored the bill.

Lilly, the most active pharmaceutical company lobbying on the legislation, referenced the and the . Novo Nordisk twice.

Those companies also hired the same lobbying firm: Checkmate Government Relations, which under close Donald Trump Jr. associate Ches McDowell has quickly become a power player on K Street. In the first year of Trump鈥檚 second term, Checkmate鈥檚 federal lobbying revenue exploded from $70,000 in 2024 to .

Eli Lilly paid the firm $400,000 for six lobbyists while paid $360,000 for five. Four lobbyists worked for both drugmakers, including McDowell; Chris LaCivita Jr., the son of a top Trump 2024 campaign adviser; and , a former House senior counsel and deputy assistant Treasury secretary.

In November 2025, the White House announced a 鈥 that cut the price for several GLP-1s to roughly $350 鈥 and to $150 for oral versions 鈥 through TrumpRx. The deal also allows Medicare and Medicaid to cover those drugs for the first time 鈥 a policy shift the industry has long tried to achieve.

Overlapping lobbying networks

Checkmate is just one of several lobbying firms hired by multiple TrumpRx participants. Some represent a staggering number of them.

Image
A pie chart showing that more than 60% of the 526 lobbyists hired by the 17 TrumpRx-aligned pharmaceutical firms in 2025 previously worked in government, higher than the 51% revolver rate across the broader industry.
OpenSecrets


Of the more than 500 lobbyists representing the 17 companies, more than 60% were revolving-door lobbyists. That outpaces the 51% revolver rate across the broader pharmaceutical and health-products industry.

Among the participants, that influence is highly concentrated: 166 represented multiple drugmakers, including 17 who represented 10 or more.

Twelve of the 17 companies hired at least one of four firms with the closest ties to the Trump administration: Checkmate, Miller Strategies, BGR Group or Ballard Partners.

Ballard Partners was founded by , a former Trump Victory PAC chair, and counts White House Chief of Staff as a former lobbyist along with former Attorney General Pam Bondi. BGR Group is led by former Trump campaign adviser and previously employed Transportation Secretary . Miller Strategies is headed by Jeff Miller, the .

Another major lobbying hub for the firms is the Todd Strategy Group. Paul Edattel, former chief health counsel for the House Energy and Commerce Committee, represented 15 clients 鈥 the most of any single lobbyist 鈥 across 13 of the companies. Firm founder Dan Todd and Eric Bergren, former chief of staff for Rep. Brett Guthrie (R-Ky.), each represented 13 clients across 12 companies.

Several former lawmakers appear across the firms鈥 rosters. Former Rep. Kurt Schrader (D-Ore.) lobbied for five drugmakers 鈥 Eli Lilly, Novo Nordisk, Pfizer, Sanofi and Bristol Myers Squibb. Former Rep. Ed Whitfield (R-Ky.) worked for Gilead, Johnson & Johnson and Genentech. Additionally, former Sen. Richard Burr (R-N.C.) lobbied for Novartis.

鈥淧resumably, the folks that are going to be really useful lobbyists come at a higher price,鈥 Wouters said. 鈥淚 worry that the interests represented by those with much deeper pockets, if they have a bigger say in these legislative debates, I worry about the outcomes and if all interests are represented. Same thing with the revolving door. 鈥 I worry that it鈥檚 just not a level playing field.鈥

Correction: The article has been corrected to remove a reference to Novozymes North America being a subsidiary of Novo Nordisk. 

was produced by and reviewed and distributed by 爆料TV.


Trending Now