The Republican leadership is outraged that large corporations are taking sides in our increasingly fractured political arena. That’s hysterically funny and totally hypocritical, which should be obvious to everyone except Republican leadership. What Mitch McConnell is actually saying here is – as long as you corporate leaders are on OUR side, it’s all good. 

Republicans have never seen this level of abandonment by the corporate elite. At least not in my lifetime. But the real problem has nothing to do with which side the corporate elite are on in our nation’s endless political skirmishes. The real problem is that corporations are taking sides at all.

The painful reality is that large corporations’ deep involvement in politics has been normalized now for more than a century, thanks primarily to the US Supreme Court, which allowed corporations to donate money and to lobby elected leaders and candidates for office.

We desperately need to bring back the comprehensive set of laws that prohibited certain corporate actions and required other actions – which were the law of the land for our nation’s entire first century. There is no legitimate role for corporations in the body politic.

-Paul Cienfuegos, Community Rights US Founding Director

McConnell tells CEOs critical of voting restrictions to ‘stay out of politics’

Republicans’ standing in corporate America appears under threat as Senate minority leader warns: ‘Don’t pick sides in the big fights’

Published by The Guardian, April 5, 2021 by David Smith.

Republicans’ standing as the party of corporate America appears to be under threat after Mitch McConnell, the minority leader in the Senate, told chief executives critical of voting restrictions to “stay out of politics”.

Last week Coca-Cola, Delta and dozens of other companies condemned a new election law in Georgia while Major League Baseball announced it would move the All-Star Game from the state in protest.

“I found it completely discouraging to find a bunch of corporate CEOs getting in the middle of politics,” McConnell told a press conference in his home state of Kentucky on Monday. “My advice to the corporate CEOs of America is to stay out of politics. Don’t pick sides in these big fights.”

He warned companies against giving into advocacy campaigns. “It’s jaw-dropping to see powerful American institutions not just permit themselves to be bullied, but join in the bullying themselves,” he said.

McConnell also issued a written statement that claimed Georgia’s new law has been portrayed unfairly and bemoaned “a coordinated campaign by powerful and wealthy people to mislead and bully the American people”.

Railing against the “Outrage-Industrial Complex”, the senator went on: “Americans do not need or want big business to amplify disinformation or react to every manufactured controversy with frantic leftwing signaling.

“From election law to environmentalism to radical social agendas to the second amendment, parts of the private sector keep dabbling in behaving like a woke parallel government. Corporations will invite serious consequences if they become a vehicle for far-left mobs to hijack our country from outside the constitutional order.”

He did not elaborate on the warning, but the comments imply a significant rupture after decades in which big business tended to favour Republicans and give them the lion’s share of campaign contributions, enjoying the benefits of low taxes and limited government regulation.

Now, however, companies face greater pressure to show they are socially responsible actors and take stand on political issues. The new restrictions in Georgia and elsewhere are widely expected to have a disproportionate impact on voters of colour.

The White House denied McConnell’s claim of a coordinated campaign to mislead the public. The press secretary, Jen Psaki, said: “We’ve not asked corporations to specific actions; that’s not our focus here.

“Our focus is on continuing to convey that it’s important that voting is easier, not harder, that when there are laws in place that make it harder, we certainly express an opposition to those laws.”

Former president Donald Trump spent months falsely claiming that his 2020 election defeat was the result of widespread voter fraud. He failed in dozens of court challenges and his own attorney general, William Barr, reported no significant irregularities…

Read the full article in The Guardian HERE.
Photo credit: “Mitch McConnell” by Gage Skidmore is licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0