Transportation Secretary Duffy appeared in a reality series funded by DOT-regulated companies

Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy, his wife Rachel Campos-Duffy, and their nine children are the on-camera centerpiece of a five-part reality series, "The Great American Road Trip," produced at no personal cost to the family by a nonprofit, The Great American Road Trip Inc. The nonprofit's sponsors are dominated by companies the Department of Transportation regulates — including Boeing, Toyota, United Airlines, Shell, and Royal Caribbean — and a pitch deck reported by Politico offered higher-paying sponsors on-screen logo placement and speaking roles. The watchdog group CREW asked the DOT Inspector General to investigate possible gift- and travel-rule violations, and Senate Democrats pressed Duffy on the arrangement at a May 19, 2026 Appropriations subcommittee hearing.

  • Sean Duffy (U.S. Secretary of Transportation)
  • U.S. Department of Transportation

Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy and his family served as the on-camera centerpiece of "The Great American Road Trip," a five-part reality-television series timed to the United States' 250th anniversary and filmed across roughly ten states. The production was paid for not by the Duffys but by a nonprofit organization, The Great American Road Trip Inc., whose publicly listed sponsors are dominated by corporations that the U.S. Department of Transportation regulates — among them Boeing, Toyota, United Airlines, Shell, Royal Caribbean, and Enterprise. According to a sponsorship pitch deck reported by Politico, backers contributed sums ranging from roughly $100,000 to $1 million, with larger donors offered greater on-screen prominence, logo placement, and "strategically placed speaking roles" within the program. The arrangement was first reported publicly by NPR on May 12, 2026; The Standing records that date as the point at which it entered the public record.

The Standing records this under self-dealing and monetizing-office. A sitting Cabinet secretary lent his official position — the premise of the series is a Transportation Secretary's family road trip — to a professionally produced program that benefited him and his family at no personal cost, and that converted the office into a vehicle attracting six- and seven-figure corporate sponsorship. The watchdog group Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW) filed a complaint asking the DOT Inspector General to examine who paid for the Duffy family's participation and whether federal gift, travel, or ethics rules were violated. The structural concern is that the companies underwriting the production are the same firms whose industries Duffy's department oversees.

No quid pro quo has been established. The Department of Transportation has said a formal agreement bars the sponsoring nonprofit from receiving "any favorable consideration" for future federal funds, awards, or contracts; critics note that the agreement names the nonprofit but not the individual corporate sponsors that stand behind it. At a Senate Appropriations subcommittee hearing on May 19, 2026, Democratic senators questioned Duffy about the arrangement, and Duffy defended the trip and pointed to campaign contributions received by his questioners. Consistent with The Standing's broken-windows approach, the entry records the conflict-of-interest structure and the appearance of leverage as a discrete documented event; whether any rule was broken is left to the Inspector General's review and to editorial follow-up.

  1. Duffy's 'Great American Road Trip' raises ethics questionsNPR primary accessed May 21, 2026
  2. Democratic Senators Grill Transportation Secretary Duffy About Reality TV Road Trip ProjectDemocracy Now! secondary accessed May 21, 2026
  3. Sean Duffy defends road trip series amid Senate Democrats' concernsThe Hill secondary accessed May 21, 2026
  4. Trump cabinet member Duffy facing ethics scrutiny over TV road tripThe Detroit News secondary accessed May 21, 2026