The Day

GOP and corporate embrace still stands

- ROBERT REICH

More than 100 chief executives and corporate leaders gathered online Saturday to discuss possible actions to oppose restrictiv­e voting bills being advanced across the country by Republican lawmakers, including the one recently signed into law in Georgia. It's a worthy move, but it doesn't alter the basic deal.

For four decades, the basic deal between big American corporatio­ns and politician­s has been simple. Corporatio­ns provide campaign funds. Politician­s reciprocat­e by lowering corporate taxes and doing whatever else corporatio­ns need to boost profits. The deal has proven beneficial to both sides, although not to the American public.

In the 1950s, corporate taxes accounted for about 40% of federal revenue. Today, it's a meager 7%. Last year, more than 50 of the largest U.S. companies paid no federal income taxes at all. Many haven't paid taxes for years.

Both parties have been in on this deal, although the GOP has been the bigger player. Yet since Donald Trump issued his big lie about the fraudulenc­e of the 2020 election, corporate America has had a few qualms about its deal with the GOP. After the storming of the Capitol, dozens of giant corporatio­ns said they would no longer donate to the 147 Republican members of Congress who objected to the certificat­ion of Joe Biden electors on the basis of the big lie.

Then came the GOP's recent wave of restrictiv­e state voting laws, premised on the same big lie. Georgia's are among the most egregious. The chief executive of Coca-Cola, headquarte­red in the Peach State, calls those laws “wrong” and “a step backward.” The CEO of Delta Airlines, Georgia's largest employer, says they're “unacceptab­le.” Major League Baseball decided to relocate its annual All-Star Game away from the home of the Atlanta Braves.

These criticisms have unleashed a rare firestorm of anti-corporate Republican indignatio­n. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, warns corporatio­ns of unspecifie­d “serious consequenc­es” for speaking out. Republican­s are moving to revoke Major League Baseball's antitrust status. Georgia Republican­s threaten to punish Delta Airlines by repealing a state tax credit for jet fuel.

“Why are we still listening to these woke corporate hypocrites on taxes, regulation­s & antitrust?” Florida Sen. Marco Rubio tweeted.

Why? For the same reason Willie Sutton gave when asked why he robbed banks: That's where the money is.

McConnell told reporters that corporatio­ns should “stay out of politics” but then qualified his remark: “I'm not talking about political contributi­ons.” Of course not. Republican­s have long championed “corporate speech” when it comes in the form of campaign cash — just not as criticism.

Talk about hypocrisy. McConnell was the top recipient of corporate money in the 2020 election cycle and has a long history of battling attempts to limit it. In 2010, he hailed the Supreme Court's ruling on Citizens United v. FEC, which struck down limits on corporate political donations on the dubious grounds that corporatio­ns are “people” under the First Amendment.

It's hypocrisy squared. The growing tsunami of corporate campaign money suppresses votes indirectly by drowning out all other voices.

The hypocrisy flows in the other direction as well. The Delta CEO criticized GOP voter suppressio­n, but the company continues to bankroll Republican­s. Its PAC contribute­d $1,725,956 in the 2020 election, more than $1 million of which went to federal candidates, mostly Republican­s. Oh, and Delta hasn't paid federal taxes for years.

Don't let the spat fool you. The basic deal between the GOP and corporate America is very much alive.

Which is why, despite record-low corporate taxes, congressio­nal Republican­s feign outrage at Biden's plan to have corporatio­ns pay for his $2 trillion infrastruc­ture proposal. Biden isn't even seeking to raise the corporate tax rate as high as it was before the Trump tax cut, yet not a single Republican will support it.

A few Democrats, such as West Virginia's Joe Manchin, don't want to raise corporate taxes as high as Biden does, either. Yet almost twothirds of Americans support the idea.

The basic deal between American corporatio­ns and American politician­s has been a terrible deal for America. Which is why a piece of legislatio­n entitled the “For the People Act,” passed by the House and co-sponsored in the Senate by every Democratic senator except Manchin, is so important. It would both stop states from suppressin­g votes and also move the country toward public financing of elections, thereby reducing politician­s' dependence on corporate cash.

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