National Post

DIEHARD TRUMP REPUBLICAN­S, BUSINESS ON COLLISION COURSE

Executives want Washington to tackle COVID fallout

- Andrew Edgecliffe- Johnson, James Politi and Courtney Weaver

Republican­s supporting Donald Trump’s efforts to overturn the U. S. election are on a collision course with U. S. business leaders, as companies reconsider support and funding for politician­s they deem to be a threat to national stability.

The decision by 13 Republican senators to join most House Republican­s in refusing to certify Joe Biden’s victory on Wednesday was quickly denounced by business groups, whose leaders voiced alarm at the threat it posed to a democracy that most had taken for granted.

Their action “undermines our democracy and the rule of law”, warned the U. S. Chamber of Commerce, as a small business coalition blasted the “shameful complicity” of elected officials trying to help Trump “undermine the will of the voters”.

Attempts to thwart the orderly transfer of power to Biden ran “counter to the essential tenets of our democracy”, added more than 180 New York executives including Accenture’s Julie Sweet, Blackrock’s Larry Fink and KKR’S Henry Kravis.

Pointedly, several of the statements argued that indulging baseless conspiracy theories — including that Biden only won thanks to mass voter fraud — was bad for business at a time when executives want Washington to tackle the economic fallout from COVID-19.

Sowing further distrust in the political system “threatens the economic recovery... our country desperatel­y needs”, said the Business Roundtable, which is led by Doug Mcmillon, Walmart chief executive.

Richard Edelman, head of the eponymous public relations group, said: “CEOS are scared. They don’t like the idea America is a banana republic.”

A Financial Times analysis found that the 13 senators supporting Trump’s last- gasp effort to cling to power have been bankrolled by some of corporate America’s biggest names. Together they received nearly US$ 2 million over the 2019- 20 election cycle from the political action committees of companies including Koch Industries, Berkshire Hathaway, UPS and AT&T.

Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, a Yale School of Management professor who convened a call of 33 top executives on Tuesday to discuss how business should respond, said there was “universal outrage” among a group that usually spanned the political spectrum.

In a straw poll taken during the call, 88 per cent said officials supporting Trump’s stance were “aiding and abetting sedition”; just over half said they would consider cutting investment in the senators’ states; and 100 per cent said companies should warn lobbyists that they would no longer fund politician­s denying the election results.

“These business leaders are certainly not going to be investing in the divisive fringe,” Prof Sonnenfeld said.

Senators who should know better were “playing with fire,” added Tom Glocer, the Morgan Stanley director and former chief executive of Thomson Reuters. “If people are going to think twice before this political opportunis­m, we have to hit the only thing they care about” — campaign contributi­ons.

However, some lobbyists in Washington cautioned they did not expect a fundamenta­l shift away from corporate donations to Republican lawmakers who have embraced Trump’s defiance of an orderly transition.

They pointed out that corporate support is based on other issues that are important to them, and predicted that companies would wait to see how the furor over the confirmati­on played out. They added that the controvers­ial incumbent senators supporting Trump’s efforts could be preferable to potential primary challenger­s from the right.

Still, companies may face external pressure over their financial support for politician­s who are pushing election fraud claims that have been rejected by a succession of courts and state officials.

Steve Schmidt, a founder of The Lincoln Project, warned on Sunday night that the political action committee led by Bush- era Republican­s would turn its fire on corporate donors who professed support for racial equality while funding politician­s seeking to “throw out millions of Black votes.”

In a series of tweets, Schmidt threatened that his well- funded group would not just draw attention to companies’ political spending, but would “foment employee rebellions and shareholde­r revolts” in its effort to “strangle the money flow” to Trump’s congressio­nal supporters.

Such pressure could embroil many of the most prominent U. S. companies, prompting renewed accusation­s of corporate hypocrisy. The FT’S analysis found that more than 20 Business Roundtable members — including EY, Fedex, Goldman Sachs and Microsoft — have funded at least one of the senators the group’s statement implicitly critiques.

Despite its statement decrying efforts to overturn the election result, the U. S. Chamber of Commerce declined to say whether it would make vote certificat­ion a litmus test for its future Congressio­nal endorsemen­ts.

“That means there are no consequenc­es to a representa­tive or senator who does not heed the chamber’s ( request),” said Bruce Freed, president of the Center for Political Accountabi­lity, which tracks corporate contributi­ons. Even so, Freed said that companies faced “a moment of truth” with regard to their political spending.

“They’re signing up to Business Roundtable statements... but their senate roguespoli­tical dollars haven’t changed,” he said, predicting that investors would ask tougher questions about the issue at upcoming annual meetings.

Daniella Ballou- Aares, chief executive of the Leadership Now Project, agreed that there had been “a step change” in the concerns of chief executives, following the senators’ announceme­nt and the disclosure of Trump’s call pressing Georgia’s secretary of state to “find” extra votes to overturn his election loss in the state.

Companies were interested in solving problems and many were now questionin­g the return on their investment in politician­s showing little interest in finding bipartisan agreement, Ballou-aares added.

“If I were a government affairs office now I’d kind of want to ask for a refund if I’d supported those candidates,” Ballou- Aares said of the Republican­s who planned to defy the election result.

“Whatever one thinks about corporate investment in politics, I think few companies thought when they were writing their cheques that they were giving licence for underminin­g democracy.”

 ?? PHOTO ILUSTRATIO­N NATIONAL POST ??
PHOTO ILUSTRATIO­N NATIONAL POST
 ?? Andrew Harrer / Bloomberg ?? Doug Mcmillon, CEO of Walmart Inc. speaks as President Donald Trump listens at a news conference in March. The revolt of some senators against certifying the presidenti­al election victory of Joe Biden doesn’t sit well with business.
Andrew Harrer / Bloomberg Doug Mcmillon, CEO of Walmart Inc. speaks as President Donald Trump listens at a news conference in March. The revolt of some senators against certifying the presidenti­al election victory of Joe Biden doesn’t sit well with business.

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