Chattanooga Times Free Press

Anti-Amazon ads ask: ‘Does this look like a company that needs taxpayer cash?’

- BY CRAIG JARVIS

A national organizati­on for conservati­ve millennial­s is launching a digital ad campaign opposing financial incentives in 20 U.S. states that are finalists to land Amazon’s second headquarte­rs.

Generation Opportunit­y advocates for free markets and economic policies that benefit their membership of 18- to 38-year-olds. It opposes using financial incentives to lure companies to states, and objects to the secretive nature of negotiatio­ns the enticement­s entail.

The group calls incentives “corporate welfare.” Republican and Democratic lawmakers in North Carolina have supported the state’s incentives programs because they bring jobs.

The ads will run on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram, which the organizati­on sees as the digital platforms most likely to reach its target audience, according to a spokesman.

State chapters in North Carolina, Virginia and Texas have been especially vocal opposing incentives for Amazon, according to the group. The North Carolina chapter last year bought digital ads criticizin­g Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper. Generation Opportunit­y is funded in part by the conservati­ve financier Koch brothers.

“While small businesses and young entreprene­urs struggle, government cuts special deals with Amazon, a corporatio­n that raked in $175 billion last year!” the ad says. “Does this look like a company that needs taxpayer cash?”

“It gets worse,” the ad continues with a photo of Cooper. “Americans have no idea how much their government is taking from them.”

“Unfair corporate welfare deals like the ones being lobbed at Amazon fuel cronyism, are conducted in darkness and force small businesses to subsidize their competitio­n,” Generation Opportunit­y policy director David Barnes said in a statement. “Instead of offering sweetheart deals to wealthy special interests that don’t need the help, government­s at every level should focus on creating fair economic environmen­ts that give all businesses — including young entreprene­urs — the opportunit­y to compete and succeed on an even playing field.”

Job recruiters in Georgia, Tennessee and North Carolina, like in most states in the running, have not disclosed how much money they are offering Amazon to choose them.

A provision in North Carolina’s state budget last year provides enhanced incentives for companies that invest at least $4 billion and create at least 5,000 jobs. They could receive full tax refunds and the state could help pay to develop sites. Amazon says it will spend $5 billion and hire up to 50,000 high-paying jobs.

Senate Leader Phil Berger and House Speaker Tim Moore wrote a letter to Amazon last year saying they were open to “further modificati­ons” to the financial incentives package that has been offered.

Amazon invited proposals from the U.S., Canada and Mexico, and received 238 submission­s, which last month it narrowed to 20, including Toronto. Nashville and Atlanta are among the cities Amazon is still considerin­g.

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