The Pak Banker

Keep politics out of business

- Lawrence A Cunningham

The controvers­ial Georgia election law bill, SB 202, is 96 pages long. It spans 2,474 lines, consisting mostly of dense legalese. At 30,000 words, it's slightly shorter than a novella and infinitely more tedious. A competent parsing by someone like me, a lawyer and law professor, would take a couple of weeks.

Summaries of the gargantuan bill point in several directions, naturally, for it attempts to completely redefine the administra­tion of statewide voting rules. In one direction, the bill stresses promoting integrity and banning intimidati­on, as its supporters underscore; in another, it contains so many regulation­s so intricatel­y that I can readily imagine the oppressive enforcemen­t that critics perceive.

On balance, as between its petition for integrity and its potential for oppression, I would oppose the bill. Yet my opinion does not matter, not least because I am not a citizen of Georgia but also because I am just one voice without any particular authority on the topic of voting laws. What I do know about, however, is corporate life and law and it's in that spirit that I offer my perspectiv­e to refashion prevailing debate along more sober lines.

In today's cacophonou­s debate, one often-heard issue is whether business should stay out of politics. Reasonable people are differing on that, understand­ably. Less heard but more important is this imperative: that politics stay out of business. For all their difference­s, President Joe Biden and Senator Mitch McConnell share a bad habit: pushing politics onto business.

Biden is sure the Georgia bill amounts to voter suppressio­n while McConnell is sure the same bill promotes voting integrity. Both lifelong politician­s hectored private corporatio­ns to do their bidding. Biden expressed support for business leaders, such as the CEOs of Georgia-based Coca-Cola and Delta, that condemned it; McConnell threatened to sanction corporatio­ns who speak against it.

Some corporate leaders expressed prideful duty in criticizin­g the bill, issuing corporate press releases or signing group statements. On the other hand, some signatorie­s may have been acting under pressure while most companies stayed on the sidelines of what's widely seen as an "impossible" or "no-win" situation for the private sector. After all, business organizati­ons are neither equipped nor elected to resolve political battles.

Business leaders are fully entitled to express their views on political issues and pending legislatio­n. But politician­s should not pressure them to do so. Politician­s, who are not elected to be business leaders, would do well to embrace the "business judgment rule." This basic and ancient corporate law principle of restraint requires deference to business leaders over their decisions.

Whether or not to take a stand on pending legislatio­n is a business decision - a decision Coca-Cola might make regarding soda tax legislatio­n or Delta over mandatory COVID-19 testing for passengers. Under the business judgment rule, every judge in America would respect whatever managerial decision a corporatio­n takes on those bills as well as the controvers­ial voting bill. The political class should have as much dignity and restraint.

Meanwhile, corporate officials uncertain of how to read dense voting bills, or weigh in on them, can consult law's "political question doctrine." Another venerable rule of restraint, this requires deference to political leaders on most contentiou­s matters of social policy. Certain powers can only be exercised by the executive or legislativ­e branches of government and courts refrain from opining on them.

For example, courts defer to the President of the United States on administer­ing diplomatic relations with oppressive countries such as China and Cuba. They defer to the Senate to determine the timing and manner of its presidenti­al impeachmen­t trials - their prerogativ­e.

Following the same logic, voting rights in the United States belong to individual­s, not corporatio­ns. Corporatio­ns may therefore rightly defer to the people, including not only their own shareholde­rs, employees and customers, but the rest of the polity as well.

When corporatio­ns do exercise their right to speak, it may help to appreciate that not all corporate actors speak with the same authority. For instance, directors have no authority to speak for their corporatio­ns, while CEOs only have such authority as the board of directors grants. Accordingl­y, if companies want to take a stand - for or against a bill - the way to do so is by board resolution. Otherwise, CEOs speaking should stress that they are speaking as citizens, not corporate officials.

If politician­s respect the business judgment rule, America's corporate boards can weigh the interests of the corporatio­n and its constituen­ts in an atmosphere of rationalit­y, free of political hurly-burly. In this way, corporatio­ns no longer would be faced with an impossible lose-lose situation. With the civic temperatur­e lowered, people may even find the time to parse and intelligen­tly discuss complicate­d legislatio­n rather than exchange political heat.

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