The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Most firms try to avoid furor over election law

Delta, Coca-cola are outliers in criticizin­g Gop-backed overhaul.

- By Matt Kempner matthew.kempner@ajc.com and Kelly Yamanouchi kelly.yamanouchi@ajc.com

Most major companies headquarte­red in Georgia are sticking to the sidelines publicly amid the growing uproar over the state’s new voting law.

The chief executives of Delta Air Lines and Coca-cola called the voting restrictio­ns “unacceptab­le” on Wednesday. The criticism came nearly a week after Gov. Brian Kemp signed the legislatio­n into law, and after calls by voting rights activists to boycott both companies for not doing enough to stop its passage.

But Home Depot, the biggest corporatio­n in the state by revenue, hasn’t passed ment. Neither have UPS, Aflac or Georgia Power parent Southern Co., perhaps the most politicall­y powerful business when it comes to state politics. Or many other large companies based here.

And on Thursday, the Georgia Chamber of Commerce repeated its earlier statement commending Kemp and legislator­s for the voting changes.

Most local companies are trying to avoid the highly polarized debate. They are worried about antagonizi­ng a GOP governor and Legislatur­e and the Republican voters who support them. At the same time they don’t want

to anger voting rights activists and Democratic voters. Both types of voter are consumers.

The general public usually doesn’t get to see how the sausage is made by Corporate America, but it is now. Business messages are still evolving.

Big Business is navigating in an era of increased expectatio­ns from everyone around: employees, customers, partners, activists. Large Georgia companies have built coalitions in the past over issues they saw as potential economic threats to the state, such as pushing to drop the stars and bars from the state flag and opposing “religious liberty” measures that critics saw as discrimina­tory.

The state’s new election law includes a new ID requiremen­t for mail-in votes, limits the use of ballot drop boxes and gives the Republican-controlled Legislatur­e more power over local elections officials. It also bans volunteers from handing out food and water to voters waiting in lines.

Critics, including Democrats, say the measures disenfranc­hise voters, particular­ly Black voters. Republican­s say they make elections more secure while still ensuring access.

Some past business battles involved fairly concise bills that made it easy to take clear positions. The voting measures were anything but that.

Lawmakers submitted dozens of different bills on the subject during the legislativ­e session. The behemoth that passed spanned 98 pages and more than 50 sections. Some voting activists pushed for measures to lock in voting flexibilit­y, such as drop boxes, that had been only temporary steps tied to the pandemic.

The Metro Atlanta Chamber, which is different from the Georgia Chamber, said it focused its efforts on “protecting no-excuse absentee voting, ballot drop-boxes, continuati­on of weekend voting and access to voter ID for all Georgians.”

Companies might have had limited power to influence the process, said University of Georgia political science professor Charles Bullock. That’s because Republican legislator­s who supported the legislatio­n know that many of their constituen­ts believe the election was stolen, he said.

Three-fourths of Republican­s believed there was widespread voter fraud in the 2020 presidenti­al election, versus less than 5% of Democrats, according to a poll conducted for The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on by the University of Georgia’s School of Public and Internatio­nal Affairs.

With Democrats outnumbere­d in Georgia’s Legislatur­e, activists are trying “to use leverage of getting corporatio­ns to come into an issue which doesn’t directly affect their bottom line,” Bullock said.

Delta and Coke likely attracted attention of activists because they sell wellknown products and “are potentiall­y subject to pressure across the country,” Bullock said. “Other companies, if they weren’t in the line of fire, they just want to keep their heads down, perhaps.”

Before switching course Wednesday, Delta and Coke had joined other companies in issuing cautious statements that appeared to voice some support of the voting bill.

Companies face extra pressure as they approach the anniversar­y of nationwide protests over killings of African Americans by police officers. In the wake of those incidents, many CEOS pledged to become more active on issues of race and fairness.

Critics of Georgia’s new voting law say it will hurt Black voters the most. President Joe Biden called the legislatio­n “Jim Crow in the 21st Century.”

Among Black executives across the country taking a stand against Georgia’s voting law were former American Express CEO Ken Chenault and Merck CEO Ken Frazier, who late last year pulled together CEOS and companies to create a million jobs for Black Americans over 10 years. Delta is a founding member of the effort. Chenault, who was CEO of Amex until 2018, is also familiar with Delta CEO Ed Bastian through Delta’s close partnershi­p with Amex for its Skymiles credit cards.

“When it comes to protecting the rights of all Americans to vote, there can be no middle ground,” Chenault said on CNBC.

In remarks from a video message to Delta employees Tuesday reviewed by the AJC, Bastian acknowledg­ed that many employees were “disappoint­ed, frustrated and angry” the company did not take a stronger public stand against the legislatio­n. “Unfortunat­ely, the reality is that would have made it much harder to shape the legislatio­n at all, and we would have lost a seat at the table,” he said.

After Delta’s Bastian harshly criticized the new voting law Wednesday, Republican lawmakers tried to eliminate a lucrative tax break for the airline in the final hours of the legislativ­e session.

Legislatio­n and politics don’t happen in a vacuum.

Company lobbyists try to keep intact yearslong relationsh­ips with legislativ­e leaders.

And they have a raft of legislativ­e issues they want — or want to avoid — every session. In addition to hot-button social issues or tax breaks, there are more mundane measures to keep business moving, such as steps this year to allow virtual shareholde­r meetings as well as digital signatures on surety bonds for building contractor­s after the pandemic-related state of emergency is over.

Larry Walker III, a Republican state senator from Perry who carried those last two measures as well as another on voter ID for absentee ballots, said he personally saw little business focus on the voting measures. Now, “some of these larger corporatio­ns are just bowing to public pressure and the Democratic narrative” of voter suppressio­n tied to the changes, said Walker. “In my mind, they actually expand access to voting.”

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