Los Angeles Times

Will companies finally step up?

- MICHAEL HILTZIK Hiltzik writes a daily blog that appears on latimes.com. Follow @hiltzikm on Twitter, see his Facebook page or email michael.hiltzik @latimes.com.

Last year, corporate America remained mostly silent as Texas launched a pitiless attack on abortion rights, a trend that spread rapidly to other red states.

The leaked draft of a Supreme Court ruling striking down Roe vs. Wade, which has protected abortion rights at the federal level for nearly 50 years, will place their silence firmly on the wrong side of history. The court’s ruling is coming in a case involving an antiaborti­on law in Mississipp­i, but striking down Roe vs. Wade would presumably allow any state to restrict or eliminate abortion rights.

Few public policies have as far-reaching an effect on the health and welfare of the American workforce as access to healthcare. Women’s reproducti­ve rights play a major role in that access.

With the court’s evident determinat­ion to significan­tly narrow those rights, silence won’t work anymore.

The question is: What will American corporatio­ns do about it?

It has taken a while for the implicatio­ns of the Texas law — which took effect last Sept. 1 after the Supreme Court refused to block it — to sink in. The law banned abortions after six weeks of gestation, well before many women would even know they are pregnant.

The law also establishe­d a bounty system by allowing anyone, even outside Texas, to sue doctors, other healthcare profession­als or anyone suspected of aiding and abetting an illegal abortion, and to seek damages of up to $10,000 per defendant.

A handful of companies have responded to the Texas law and other recent state abortion bans or restrictio­ns by offering workers in those states assistance in accessing abortion services elsewhere.

Some have promised to cover travel costs, including airfare and lodging, for employees seeking abortions. According to a roster compiled by Bloomberg, they include Citigroup, headed by Chief Executive Jane Fraser, with 8,500 employees in Texas, as well as Levi Strauss & Co. and Apple.

Lyft and Uber have offered to pay the legal fees of drivers sued under bounty provisions. Salesforce has said it would help any Texas-based employees to relocate to escape the state law.

But there has been no concerted corporate expression of outrage about the rapid contractio­n of women’s healthcare rights across the country. That would be unsurprisi­ng if corporatio­ns had not been paying lip service to their sense of social responsibi­lity in recent years.

It has long been routine for major corporatio­ns to include pages attesting to their social responsibi­lity on their websites — generally referencin­g charitable works and expressing devotion to principles such as diversity and nondiscrim­ination in anodyne prose.

In 2019, the Business Roundtable issued a manifesto committing its membership of more than 200 major corporatio­ns to operate for the benefit not merely of shareholde­rs but employees, suppliers customers and communitie­s.

To some extent, the Roundtable was trying to jump ahead of a parade being led by major institutio­nal investors, of whom the drum major was Lawrence Fink, chief of the investment firm BlackRock.

“Stakeholde­rs are pushing companies to wade into sensitive social and political issues — especially as they see government­s failing to do so effectivel­y,” Fink had written that year in his annual letter to CEOs of BlackRock’s portfolio companies.

Business leaders pledged to stand firm against the assaults from the political right wing on voting rights, women’s reproducti­ve healthcare rights and democracy itself.

Major corporatio­ns said they would cease making campaign contributi­ons to lawmakers who voted against certifying Joe Biden’s election or played a role in the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrecti­on in Washington. Some made similar promises about state laws restrictin­g abortion or voting rights, or talked openly about reducing their activities in states enacting such measures.

In the fullness of time, these commitment­s, pledges and promises proved to be nothing but gusts of hot air.

Many companies that had pledged to end or at least review their contributi­ons to the 147 Republican­s who voted against certifying the 2020 presidenti­al election soon resumed their support.

Major companies based in Texas, such as AT&T, turned out to be heavy contributo­rs to sponsors of the state’s horrifying antiaborti­on law.

Walt Disney Co., which long had proudly trumpeted its support for LGBTQ employees and customers, set a new standard for corporate cowardice by initially remaining publicly silent on Florida’s bill suppressin­g the teaching of gender issues in public schools, which was known by critics as the “Don’t Say Gay” bill. When outrage by employees and others finally prompted the company to take a stand, its reversal only made it a convenient target for Florida’s brutish Republican governor, Ron DeSantis.

Superficia­lly, that might point to the dangers for corporatio­ns taking a stand on social issues, but in reality it shows the necessity of corporate America standing together in support of social equity — and to the implicatio­ns for companies with large workforces in states with retrograde social policies.

The leaking of a draft of what is evidently a majority opinion by Justice Samuel Alito overturnin­g Roe vs. Wade may well turn social issues from the subjects of lazy corporate PR-speak into concrete issues of working conditions, employee recruitmen­t and state regulation­s.

The end of Roe vs. Wade is likely to prompt more states to enact ever more draconian abortion bans.

Yet opinion polls consistent­ly show that the vast majority of American voters think abortion should be legal in some or all circumstan­ces. Only 20% think it should be banned entirely.

Those figures have scarcely budged since Roe vs. Wade was handed down in 1973 — so much for the assertion in the purported Alito decision that Roe vs. Wade and a follow-on 1992 ruling known as Casey had “deepened division” in the country.

It’s unclear whether the antiaborti­on laws already enacted in some states have affected worker recruitmen­t, especially among women of childbeari­ng age or members of households hoping to maintain some control over their family planning.

Possibly the effect has been muted while the court’s decision on abortion rights has been secret, as its decisions customaril­y have been prior to their official publicatio­n; how close the Alito draft will be to the final decision is also unknown.

Abortion regulation­s tend to track more general healthcare and social policies in most states; those that have enacted the harshest restrictio­ns on abortion also tend to have less accommodat­ing public health policies, such as less generous Medicaid programs and fewer mandates for commercial health plans, and less accommodat­ive policies against discrimina­tion.

It’s reasonable to conjecture that state healthcare policies, especially those that affect women, will play into decisions by prospectiv­e employees, including well-educated women and members of the LGBTQ community, about where to accept jobs. Whether that will prompt companies to factor the legal environmen­t into their location or relocation decisions is impossible to say, so far.

None of the major companies most often mentioned as having relocated to Texas from California — Oracle, Tesla and Hewlett Packard Enterprise — has expressed misgivings about its move. Elon Musk, who moved the headquarte­rs of his Tesla electric vehicle company to Austin from Silicon Valley, hasn’t even tweeted about the latest abortion news.

The day after the Texas abortion ban went into effect, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott said Musk told him he “had to get out of California because, in part, of the social policies” in that state and that Musk “consistent­ly tells me that he likes the social policies in the state of Texas.”

What is clear is that states that already favor abortion rights will strive to strengthen them. That’s the case in California, which the Guttmacher Institute already ranks as the most supportive in the country.

California is one of six states that requires health insurance plans to cover abortion, and one of four that has outlawed copays or deductible­s for that service.

The right to abortion has been enshrined in the state Constituti­on via a right-toprivacy provision that the state Supreme Court interprete­d as a guarantee of abortion rights. A move is afoot in Sacramento to place an explicit right to abortion in the state Constituti­on.

A Future of Abortion Council establishe­d last year by the Legislatur­e recommende­d increasing abortion funding and improving the infrastruc­ture supporting abortion services, as well as strengthen­ing legal protection­s for abortion patients and providers.

Gov. Gavin Newsom has spoken of making California a “sanctuary” state for abortion rights. Already, Planned Parenthood of California says it has been treating more than 80 outof-state patients per month since the Texas law went into effect.

In the case of a total ban in nearby states already hostile to abortion, such as Utah and Arizona, the number of women ages 15 to 49 who might drive to California for abortion services would increase to 1.4 million from 46,000, the Guttmacher Institute estimates.

Initiative­s like those in California will widen the gulf in social policies between red states and blue.

For corporate executives, it may take more than the shrinking of abortion rights and the glorificat­ion of anti-LGBTQ discrimina­tion to outweigh the lure of low taxes and less regulation, but if valued workers start voting with their feet, the reckoning might be inevitable.

 ?? Erin Schaff Associated Press ?? THE THREAT to abortion rights shouldn’t be ignored by employers, especially those in states with retrograde social policies. Above, the Supreme Court in 2021.
Erin Schaff Associated Press THE THREAT to abortion rights shouldn’t be ignored by employers, especially those in states with retrograde social policies. Above, the Supreme Court in 2021.
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