Daily Press

CEOs join to criticize voting law changes

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More than a hundred top executives and corporate leaders gathered online this weekend to discuss their response to restrictiv­e voting laws under considerat­ion in several states and already enacted in Georgia, according to a statement from organizers of the meeting.

The statement didn’t identify the participan­ts, but The Washington Post reported that the meeting included executives from major airlines, retailers and manufactur­ers and at least one NFL owner.

Without offering specifics, the statement — issued by the Yale School of Management and two other civic groups — noted that “CEOs indicated readiness to act individual­ly and collective­ly to shore up American democracy and ensure Americans have access to a world class voting system.”

Such actions could include halting donations to politician­s who support the bills and even delaying investment­s in states that pass the restrictiv­e measures, according to Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, a Yale management professor and one of the organizers.

The Wall Street Journal, citing unnamed sources who attended, reported that Kenneth Chenault, the former chief executive of American Express Co. , and Kenneth Frazier, CEO of Merck & Co., urged dozens of leaders to collective­ly call for greater voting access. Chenault and Frazier warned businesses against dropping the issue and asked CEOs to sign a statement opposing what they view as discrimina­tory legislatio­n on voting.

The new statement could come early this week and would build on one that 72 Black executives signed last month in the wake of changes to Georgia’s voting laws, according to the newspaper’s report.

A number of companies and their leaders have spoken up on the issue in recent weeks. While Republican lawmakers such as Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., have derided such action, many activists and others say big business hasn’t gone far enough.

More than 350 different voting bills are under considerat­ion in dozens of states, according to the Brennan Center for Justice, a public-policy think tank.

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