**No, this is not the truth in the way it's presented.** It's a heavily spun, selective activist claim from a partisan source, not evidence of criminal activity. I'll break it down factually with sources.
### Origin of the Claim
The exact text and image you shared is a viral social media post (circulating on X, Facebook/77WABC, Instagram, etc., as of July 8, 2026). It comes directly from **FireThune.com**, a new activist website launched by the **American Accountability Foundation** in partnership with the **Mass Deportation Coalition**.
The site frames Sen. John Thune (R-SD, current Senate Majority Leader) as "bought and paid for" by a "cheap-labor lobby." It uses the precise figure **$1,580,276** and argues this explains why he "won't force the SAVE Act to the floor."
This is advocacy research, not neutral investigative journalism from outlets like OpenSecrets, major newspapers, or government watchdogs. No mainstream reporting has independently verified or broken this as a scandal.
### The $1.58M Donation Claim
**The raw number appears to come from public FEC data** (via OpenFEC), aggregated by the site over Thune's Senate career (since 2005). They tallied contributions to his campaign committees and leadership PAC (Heartland Values PAC) from four industries they label as dependent on "cheap foreign and illegal labor":
- **Agriculture**: ~$518,900
- **Construction**: ~$487,000
- **Hospitality**: ~$402,876
- **Elder care**: ~$171,500
**Specific PAC examples** they highlight (many of which have endorsed the DIGNITY Act, a bill critics call amnesty/"earned legal status"):
- National Association of Home Builders (BUILD PAC): $107,500
- American Seniors Housing Association: $82,500
- National Restaurant Association: $70,000
- Associated General Contractors of America, National Roofing Contractors Association, etc.
They also include some itemized employee donations (e.g., from Tyson Foods, Darden Restaurants, National Milk Producers Federation).
**This data is real and public** — you can verify aggregates via OpenSecrets.org or FEC.gov. Thune has raised tens of millions over his career from a wide range of business PACs and individuals (standard for a long-serving Republican senator from an ag-heavy state like South Dakota). Recent cycles show hundreds of thousands from construction/engineering, auto dealers, etc.
**However, the framing is misleading and loaded**:
- These are **legal U.S. business PACs and donors** contributing to a Republican who generally supports pro-business policies (taxes, regulation, infrastructure). Immigration/labor is one issue among many.
- "Illegal-Labor Lobby" is inflammatory rhetoric. These industries (ag, construction, hospitality, senior care) often face documented labor shortages and advocate for **expanded legal guest worker programs** (H-2A for agriculture, H-2B for seasonal non-ag work like tourism/landscaping). Thune has repeatedly supported H-2B expansions and reforms to help low-unemployment states like South Dakota.
- This is **not the same as "pushing amnesty"** for people already here illegally. Thune's official record emphasizes border security, enforcement, and seeing the crisis "firsthand," while supporting legal immigration pathways and temporary workers.
- No evidence these donations were a *quid pro quo* for blocking anything. That's a classic post hoc ergo propter hoc argument (correlation presented as causation/motive).
### The SAVE Act Part
The **SAVE America Act** (proof of citizenship for federal voter registration; passed the House) has faced real procedural hurdles in the Senate:
- Thune has **publicly supported it** multiple times, called it "common sense," and scheduled floor debate (e.g., March 2026 statements and press releases committing to bring it up with "full and robust debate").
- It has run into **Senate math**: Democratic opposition/filibuster, and reportedly insufficient Republican votes even for some procedural steps in prior considerations. Thune has described himself as a "clear-eyed realist" about votes and opposed aggressive maneuvers like firing the parliamentarian or easily bypassing the filibuster.
- There is genuine **intra-GOP tension**: Trump, Sen. Mike Lee, House Freedom Caucus members, and others have pushed harder for it (including linking to other bills or using reconciliation/talking filibuster). As of early July 2026, this remains a point of friction.
Thune has **not** refused to bring it to the floor outright — he has advanced it procedurally at times. Critics argue he hasn't fought hard enough (no nuclear options). Supporters say it's realistic Senate leadership, not sabotage. This is a **strategy/tactics dispute inside the Republican conference**, not proven corruption.
### Is This Criminal?
**No.**
- Campaign contributions from domestic business PACs and individuals are **legal and disclosed** under U.S. law.
- Lobbying by industries with stakes in labor/immigration policy is normal and protected.
- Proving criminal bribery or quid pro quo requires specific evidence of an explicit agreement to perform (or not perform) an official act in exchange for money — something narrowed by Supreme Court precedent and not present here. No DOJ investigation, ethics complaint, or credible reporting alleges illegality.
- The "seems criminal" reaction is understandable given the loaded framing ("Illegal-Labor Lobby," "bought and paid for"), but it reflects how polarized immigration debates have become. Similar attacks happen across the aisle on many issues.
### Bottom Line
- **Factual kernel**: Thune has received substantial (but not outlier) support from business sectors that benefit from or advocate around immigrant/guest labor. Public data backs the ~$1.58M career tally from those four industries per the activists' methodology. He supports legal temporary worker programs.
- **Spin and omission**: The claim turns standard interest-group politics and Senate procedural reality into a conspiracy of personal corruption. It ignores Thune's enforcement rhetoric, his actual scheduling of SAVE Act debate, and the legitimate legislative challenges (60-vote threshold, party divisions). The website exists to pressure/primary him from the right on immigration enforcement.
- No smoking gun of criminality or secret deal. This is advocacy framing a real policy tension (enforcement vs. business labor needs + voter integrity) as scandal.
If you want primary sources, check:
- FireThune.com (for their full methodology and donor lists)
- OpenSecrets.org or FEC.gov for Thune's filings
- Thune's Senate site for his statements on immigration, H-2 programs, and SAVE Act
- Congress.gov for the bills
This kind of claim spreads fast because it taps into deep frustrations on both immigration enforcement and "the swamp"/donor influence. The underlying debates (SAVE Act, guest workers, E-Verify, amnesty vs. enforcement) are substantive and worth having on the merits — but the criminal corruption angle here doesn't hold up to scrutiny. Let me know if you want deeper dives on specific donors, Thune's voting record, or related bills.