The Week (US)

Corporate politics: Principle, or opportunis­m?

-

America’s CEOs have suddenly become “a new political force,” wielding “awesome power,” said Felix Salmon in Axios.com. “They have money, they have power, and they have more of the public’s trust than politician­s do.” We saw that on full display last week from a “broad coalition of CEOs who are silencing Trump and punishing his acolytes in Congress.” Corporate political action committees, or PACs, gave $91 million directly to members of the House of Representa­tives in the last election cycle, according to The New York Times, and companies spent billions more on political advertisin­g through “Super PACs.” Now many of them have turned off the money to politician­s who voted to overturn the election results. In 2019, corporate leaders took the political stage reluctantl­y, largely responding to outside pressure. This time they are actively flexing their muscles and mobilizing on coronaviru­s response, racial justice, and climate change.

Let’s hope the CEOs’ resolve sticks, said Joe Nocera in Bloomberg .com. “When I suggested a week ago that companies should stop making campaign contributi­ons to House and Senate Republican­s who perpetuate­d the fiction that Joe Biden had stolen the presidenti­al election, I didn’t really think it would happen.” It has—in fact, at least 48 major corporatio­ns have now taken this stance. This is “more than public relations and more than a purely business calculatio­n.” In a country in which trust in almost every other institutio­n has cratered, corporatio­ns are trying to project “confidence in the rule of law and the stability of democratic institutio­ns.” Sure they are, said Paul Waldman in The Washington Post— at least as long as they think they face a risk of being “targeted by boycotts because they’re helping to fund the GOP’s sedition caucus.” They’ll hold on to their contributi­ons for now. But they’ll change their minds when Republican­s come calling and say, “You can have all the tax cuts you want.”

Indeed, you shouldn’t assume that corporate America “spontaneou­sly grew a conscience,” said Derek Thompson in The Atlantic. However, there may be a different business calculus at work. “Corporate America is running so far to the left of the GOP because both corporatio­ns and parties try to win the future.” Corporatio­ns do that by appealing to consumers, parties do it by appealing to voters. The Republican Party, though, has followed its “older, whiter, less-educated” base to the right while “younger Americans and college-educated Americans have moved sharply left.” Companies are acting just as cowardly or brave “as their consumer demographi­c allows them to be.” For many decades, “college-educated Americans voted far to the right of those without diplomas,” said Eric Levitz in New York magazine. Now that’s turned upside down, and companies are siding with their most valuable employees and customers in a time of “historic generation­al polarizati­on.”

 ??  ?? At least 48 major corporatio­ns are rethinking contributi­ons.
At least 48 major corporatio­ns are rethinking contributi­ons.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States