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Amazon, Google, GM, Starbucks and hundreds of companies join to oppose voting restrictions
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Here are the high-profile companies that have signed a statement opposing voting restrictions
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Axios, the call included a long list of business luminaries, including
James Murdoch, Ken Chenault, Ken Frazier, LinkedIn co-founder Reid Hoffman, Levi Strauss CEO Chip Bergh, Atlanta Falcons owner Arthur Blank, and executives of Delta, United and American Airlines, which expanded on a March initiative by 72 black executives to oppose election legislation in Georgia deemed to suppress the vote (yet nobody can articulate how).
CEO virtue signaling is such a transparent head-fake to keep the progressive mob from attacking them on pay & a lot more Median pay for CEOs of more than 300 of the biggest U.S. public companies reached $13.7 million last year. https://t.co/kPiHVjr3Uh
CEOs vow to fight voting restrictions despite threats from Trump and McConnell
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Defying Republicans, big companies keep the focus on voting rights
By David Gelles New York Times,Updated April 12, 2021, 5:34 p.m.
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Ken Frazier, the Merck chief executive. Frazier has called on corporate executives to publicly state their support for broader ballot access.MIKE COHEN/NYT
As corporate America continues to push back against a wave of restrictive voting laws under discussion across the United States, Big Law is joining the fight.
A coalition of 60 major law firms has come together âto challenge voter suppression legislation and to support national legislation to protect voting rights and increase voter participation,â said Brad Karp, chairman of the law firm Paul Weiss and organizer of the group, which has not been formally announced.