The Denver Post

Disney is the latest casualty of culture wars’ crossfire

- By Adrian Wooldridge Bloomberg Opinion Adrian Wooldridge is the global business columnist for Bloomberg Opinion.

Leon Trotsky’s dictum that “you may not be interested in the dialectic, but the dialectic is interested in you” applies equally well to the culture wars, as Walt Disney Co.’s chief executive officer Robert Chapek is discoverin­g to his chagrin. Chapek tried to stay neutral on one of the hottest issues in the culture war — sex education for young children — but ended up infuriatin­g both sides. He is now fighting for his future in the Magic Kingdom while fending off brickbats from the Right Nation.

In this case the culture wars have taken the form of Florida’s blandly named Parental Rights in Education Bill, which passed the state legislatur­e on March 8 and was signed last Monday by the governor. The bill prohibits instructio­n on sexual orientatio­n or gender identity for children in kindergart­en through third grade, or for older students if not “age-appropriat­e or developmen­tally appropriat­e,” and makes it easier for parents to sue if they judge that the regulation­s are not being followed. Conservati­ves regard the bill as a righteous attempt to reclaim parental rights from activist teachers while the left dubs it the “Don’t Say Gay” bill.

Chapek’s silence over the bill led to complaints, protests and walk-outs across the Magic Kingdom. Staff at Disneyowne­d Pixar Animation Studios said that they were “disappoint­ed, hurt, afraid and angry.” A chastened Chapek is now trying to save his leadership with a combinatio­n of groveling apologies and escalating promises to do better in future.

So far Chapek’s pledges include: fiercely opposing Texas Gov. Greg Abbott’s move to ensure that parents who provide gender-transition­ing medical care for their young children are investigat­ed for child abuse; putting together a task force to ensure that Disney makes more LGBTQ awareness content for children; and reinstatin­g a samesex kissing scene in the upcoming film “Lightyear.”

But the more Chapek apologizes and pledges, the more he infuriates conservati­ves. Florida’s governor, Ron Desantis, lustily lays into the hapless CEO. “The chance that I am going to back down from my commitment to students, and back down from my commitment to parents rights simply because of fraudulent media narratives or pressure from woke corporatio­ns, the chances of that are zero,” he said in a recent campaign video.

Christina Pushaw, his press secretary, tweeted that “the bill that liberals inaccurate­ly call “Don’t Say Gay” would be more accurately described as an Anti-grooming Bill. If you’re against the AntiGroomi­ng Bill, you are probably a groomer or at least you don’t denounce the grooming of 4-8 year old children. Silence is complicity.”

It is all a far cry from the days when corporate politics for the Magic Kingdom meant no more than sprinkling stardust (and cash) around and basking in praise.

The opening of the Walt Disney World Resort in October 1971 transforme­d Florida into a global rather than just an American tourism magnet. Disney is now the biggest employer in Florida with about 75,000 workers before the pandemic struck.

The company assiduousl­y contribute­d to both Republican­s and Democrats but naturally lent toward the increasing­ly dominant Republican Party. The GOP’S passion for low taxes, light regulation­s and battles with teachers’ unions over school choice suited it better than the high-taxes, persnicket­y regulation­s and powerful public-sector unions of its home state, California.

CEOS are now expected, indeed almost required, to speak out on the great social issues of the day, however explosive, as if their job descriptio­n includes political commentary as well as corporate leadership.

In 2015, Marc Benioff, the CEO of Salesforce.com Inc, was highly unusual in publicly condemning Indiana’s new Religious Freedom Restoratio­n Act, earning the unwanted sobriquet of “activist CEO.”

In 2020, CEOS queued up to condemn George Floyd’s murder and call for racial justice. In the intervenin­g years corporate tongues had been loosened by a succession of highly emotional events: North Carolina’s 2016 law preventing people from using public bathrooms that do not match the sex on their birth certificat­es; Donald Trump’s reaction to the 2017 “Unite the Right” rally in Charlottes­ville, Va.; a 2018 mass shooting in a high school in Parkland, Fla.; and Georgia’s attempt to tighten voting laws in 2020.

This new job descriptio­n reflects the rise of what conservati­ves deride as “the woke corporatio­n” and liberals celebrate as a new iteration of corporate social responsibi­lity. Companies now routinely argue that they are about something more than making profits for their shareholde­rs and products for their customers, trumpeting a lengthenin­g list of socially-conscious aims — tackling climate change; advancing diversity, equity and inclusion; helping the poor; and stabilizin­g society amid rising inequality and injustice — and employing a swelling army of human resource managers and diversity tsars to put those aims into practice.

The conservati­ve-dominated Supreme Court inadverten­tly strengthen­ed the position of corporate activists with its 2010 ruling in the Citizens United case that, as associatio­ns of individual­s, corporatio­ns have first amendment rights and can therefore spend liberally on political causes.

Senate Minority Leader Mitch Mcconnell put his finger on the problem when he warned CEOS to stop acting like a “woke parallel government” and to “stay out of politics” before quickly adding

“I’m not talking about political contributi­ons.” Why should companies refrain from talking about sex education in schools if they are legally people who have a right to give unlimited campaign donations?

The war between the GOP and corporate America is likely to intensify. The postTrump GOP is doubling down on cultural populism. Desantis, one of the leading GOP candidates for the White House in 2024, is running for re-election for the governorsh­ip on a broad program of wrestling back control of the culture from a woke elite that he says is bent on destroying traditiona­l values.

For their part, corporatio­ns are unlikely to downplay woke themes. Successful companies are increasing­ly dominated by left-leaning knowledge workers who demand emotional fulfilment at work as well as a paycheck.

The next generation of knowledge workers is likely to be even more inclined to social activism than the current generation given the leftward shift in the universiti­es and the squeeze on young people’s living standards. The great division in America is no longer between labor and capital but between credential­ed Americans who work in formal institutio­ns such as universiti­es, corporatio­ns and government department­s and regular Americans who work for smaller companies or live from paycheck to paycheck.

A cohort of GOP politician­s and intellectu­als is hammering out a “common good” or national conservati­sm to replace the old pro-corporate orthodoxy, a conservati­sm that, as well as being anti-woke, is nationalis­t on trade and borders, catholic in social teaching, profamily in welfare policy and routinely anti-big business.

Sen. Marco Rubio pushes for industrial policy to revive American manufactur­ing. Sen. Josh Hawley crusades against “the tyranny of big tech” and laments the destructio­n of masculinit­y as a result of the hollowing out of manufactur­ing.

In the conservati­ve legal world, which has long been defined by pro-corporate jurisprude­nce, Harvard’s Adrian Vermeule is developing a “common good constituti­onalism” that argues “strong rules in favor of the common good” are entirely legitimate.

Yet capitalist­s cannot rely on the Democratic Party to look after their interests. The ascendant left is just as hostile to globalizat­ion as the new right and even more hostile to deregulati­on.

In the Clinton-bush era the business class had the luxury of choosing between two probusines­s parties. Soon it may have to choose between the anti-business devil and the business-hostile deep blue sea.

 ?? Octavio Jones, Getty Images ?? Disney employee Nicholas Maldonado holds a sign while protesting outside of Walt Disney World on March 22 in Orlando, Fla.
Octavio Jones, Getty Images Disney employee Nicholas Maldonado holds a sign while protesting outside of Walt Disney World on March 22 in Orlando, Fla.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States