Los Angeles Times

CEOs weigh voting-rights fight

Lawmakers and states backing restrictio­ns may lose the support of business leaders.

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A consortium of chief executives and other leaders of major U.S. corporatio­ns held an hourlong Zoom call on Saturday to discuss ways to push for greater voting access amid new restrictio­ns enacted or pending in Georgia, Texas and other states.

Among the options they’re considerin­g: reevaluati­ng donations to candidates supporting restrictio­ns on voter access and reconsider­ing investment­s in states that act on such proposals, according to the nonprofit Coalition for Inclusive Capitalism, which co-hosted the meeting with Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, a Yale School of Management professor, and the Leadership Now Project.

More than 100 business leaders joined the call, including Kenneth Chenault, former chief at American Express Co., and Kenneth Frazier, CEO of Merck & Co., who earlier led an open letter among Black executives condemning voter restrictio­ns. Other participan­ts included Scott Kirby of United Airlines Holdings Inc., Target Corp.’s Brian Cornell and D.E. Shaw & Co. Managing Director Eddie Fishman, according to a person who attended the call.

“The two purposes were education and considerat­ion of options for concrete actions,” said Lynn Forester de Rothschild, founder and chair of the Coalition for Inclusive Capitalism. “There was no commitment or agreement” from the Saturday meeting.

Other actions considered include giving paid time off to staff for voting and signing on to public statements of principles.

“We were delighted to find such enthusiasm from these top business leaders who rally around each other for mutual support,” Sonnenfeld said, calling it a “statement of defiance” against those who say business leaders shouldn’t have a political voice. “They refused to be intimidate­d and have very constructi­ve ideas.”

A new law in Georgia last month requires voters to provide a state-issued identifica­tion card when requesting an absentee ballot and limits drop boxes, among other restrictio­ns.

Georgia-based companies including Coca-Cola Co. and Delta Air Lines Inc. said they had pushed for changes before the legislatio­n passed, while other companies have condemned a wave of new voting restrictio­ns.

Texas, Arizona and Florida are among the next states that could become voting-rights battlegrou­nds, and they are the focus of efforts to organize a “consistent response” among business leaders against voting restrictio­ns, said Daniella Ballou-Aares, co-founder and CEO of the Leadership Now Project.

Chenault and Frazier urged attendees to sign a statement to be published as soon as this week, opposing what they say are discrimina­tory voting laws, the Wall Street Journal reported. Chenault told executives on the call that leaders at PepsiCo Inc., PayPal Holdings Inc., T. Rowe Price Group Inc. and Hess Corp. have signaled they would join the effort, according to the newspaper.

The two executives have been calling for corporatio­ns to take more action against voting-rights legislatio­n being advanced by Republican­s in more than 40 states. Critics say the changes are aimed chiefly at limiting participat­ion of ethnic-minority Americans.

The efforts have drawn rebukes from top Republican lawmakers, including Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), who warned April 5 that “our private sector must stop taking cues from the Outrage-Industrial Complex.”

 ?? Michael Holahan Associated Press ?? MORE THAN 100 business leaders joined an hourlong Zoom call to discuss ways to address efforts to restrict voting in Georgia, Texas and other states. Above, people line up for early voting in Augusta, Ga., in October.
Michael Holahan Associated Press MORE THAN 100 business leaders joined an hourlong Zoom call to discuss ways to address efforts to restrict voting in Georgia, Texas and other states. Above, people line up for early voting in Augusta, Ga., in October.

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