Santa Cruz Sentinel

Business faces tricky path navigating post-Trump politics

- By Brian Slodysko and Josh Boak

For more than a half-century, the voice emerging from the U.S. Chamber of Commerce’s monolithic, Beaux Arts-styled building near the White House was predictabl­e: It was the embodiment of American business and, more specifical­ly, a shared set of interests with the Republican Party.

The party’s bond with corporate America, however, is fraying.

Fissures have burst open over the GOP’s embrace of conspiracy theories and rejection of mainstream climate science, as well as its dismissal of the 2020 election outcome. The most recent flashpoint was in Georgia, where a new Republican-backed law restrictin­g voting rights drew harsh criticism from Delta Air Lines and Coca Cola, whose headquarte­rs are in the state, and resulted in Major League Baseball pulling the 2021 All-Star Game from Atlanta.

Republican­s were furious. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky warned that their actions were “quite stupid,” alienating “a lot of Republican fans.” GOP strategist­s argued that they no longer needed corporate America’s money to win elections as they try to rebrand as a party of bluecollar workers.

That extends an opportunit­y to President Joe Biden and congressio­nal Democrats to find an ally in an unlikely place when the party has unified control of the federal government for the first time in a decade. Biden is pushing an ambitious $2.3 trillion infrastruc­ture package that includes corporate tax increases — which the White House is characteri­zing to CEOs as upfront

investment­s that will ultimately make companies more profitable.

“It’s important for making the country more competitiv­e,” said Cedric Richmond, the White House’s director of public engagement. “We think the plan is so important to the country that we are advocating and singing its praises to all businesses.”

Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo estimates she has talked to more than 50 business leaders about the plan, including a round of Easter weekend phone calls. She is encouragin­g companies to focus on the entire package instead of the tax increases.

“You can’t look at one piece of it and say that one number makes you walk away,” she said. “They say, ‘That’s fair. Let me think about it.’ That’s how they run their businesses.”

Whether the corporate split with the GOP widens could help answer questions about the political direction of the country and the extent to which business can continue to influence Washington.

“Nobody in the business community wants hostile communitie­s, angry finger-pointing workforces and turbulent shareholde­r bases,” said Jeffrey A. Sonnenfeld, a senior associate dean at the Yale School of

Management. “It makes your job so much harder to have every constituen­cy group at war within themselves, which has become the hallmark of the GOP.”

Sonnenfeld helped organize a Zoom call this weekend with 100 business leaders to discuss how to oppose Republican-backed proposals across the country that could limit voting. Options include stopping political donations and holding off in investment­s in states that approve the laws.

Corporate America’s marriage with Republican­s has long been one of convenienc­e, united by a belief in low taxes and the need to repeal regulation­s. But the relationsh­ip, already strained during Donald Trump’s presidency, has come under increasing pressure as companies take cultural stands.

That Republican­s and businesses report to increasing­ly distinct constituen­cies helps explain the tension.

A solid majority of Republican voters are white (86%) and older than 50 (62%), according to APVoteCast, a national survey of the 2020 electorate. Yet figures from the Bureau of Labor Statistics show that workers are more racially diverse and younger than the Republican base.

 ?? EVAN VUCCI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo speaks during a press briefing at the White House in Washington.
EVAN VUCCI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo speaks during a press briefing at the White House in Washington.

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