• Get in Touch
  • Get in Touch with our Support!
  • Privacy Policy
Tuesday, February 7, 2023
OvaNewsBlast.com
  • Home
  • News
  • African Americans
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • African Americans
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
No Result
View All Result
OvaNewsBlast.com
No Result
View All Result

Black Fortune 500 executives want companies to fight Republican voting restrictions

March 31, 2021
in Technology
Reading Time: 3min read
A A
Discover is opening a corporate office on Chicago’s South Side. It wants other companies to follow
0
SHARES
0
VIEWS
Share ShareShareShareShareShare

Some of the nation’s most prominent Black business leaders are calling out their Fortune 500 peers for their muted response to new laws that restrict voting across the country.

Merck chief executive Ken Frazier and Berkshire Hathaway director Kenneth Chenault were among the 72 Black executives who signed a letter released Wednesday challenging other corporate leaders to be more forceful in condemning what both said were deliberate attempts by Republicans to limit the number of Black Americans casting ballots in key states.

Republicans who passed Georgia’s controversial law say the measure is needed to stop illegal voting. Opponents say the legislation, and similar measures being considered in other states, amount to voter suppression efforts that will reduce minority voting. President Joe Biden has called the bill “Jim Crow in the 21st Century” and “an atrocity.”

“Many people died for the right of Blacks being able to vote,” Chenault told CNN Business on Wednesday. “What we’re calling on corporations to do is not just say they believe strongly in the right to vote. It’s to publicly and directly oppose any discriminatory legislation and all measures designed to limit any individuals ability to vote.”

The letter recounts the history of efforts to restrict African Americans’ voting rights during and prior to the Civil Rights movement and calls on the larger business community to use its influence to stop efforts to limit voting.

Additional signatories include former Xerox CEO Ursula Burns, M&T Bank chairman and chief executive René F. Jones and Google VP of Global Partnerships Bonita C. Stewart.

“As Black business leaders, we cannot sit silently in the face of this gathering threat to our nation’s democratic values and allow the fundamental right of Americans, to cast their votes for whomever they choose, to be trampled upon yet again,” the letter reads. “We call upon our colleagues in Corporate America to join us in taking a non-partisan stand for equality and democracy. Each of us stands ready to work with you on what can and must be done.”

Chenault and Frazier said this is the first time Black corporate executives have come together so forcefully to comment on a social justice issue.

Georgia’s Coca-Cola and Home Depot face boycott calls for not being more forceful in condemning Republican lawmakers in the companies’ home state for supporting bills that critics say are designed to limit Black voter turnout under the guise of combating voter fraud. Former Trump administration attorney general William Barr and other GOP leaders have concluded that widespread voter fraud doesn’t exist.

In the aftermath of the 2020 election, GOP leaders in several states, including Georgia, have come under fire for passing laws that create new voter ID requirements for absentee ballots and grant control over local election boards to state officials. A majority of Georgians voted for a Democratic president for the first time in a generation and elected its first Black senator.

The Georgia bill Gov. Brian Kemp signed into law on Thursday also restricts the use of ballot drop boxes in parts of the state more-heavily populated by Black Americans and makes it a crime to give food and water to voters standing in line at the polls.

“What they’ve done is they’ve gone into the legislatures and, without any kind of evidence or fact-finding, have passed laws to make it harder for people to vote,” Frazier told CNN Business . “I think if you look at the totality of all those things, it’s unquestionable it will have an impact not just on illegal voters but also legal voters.”

Credit: Source link

ShareTweetSendSharePinShare
Previous Post

Former Athletics Director Jean Lenti Ponsetto Honored as Member of NACDA 2021 Hall of Fame Class

Next Post

Accelerating Value-Based Care Transformation Today and Post COVID-19

Next Post
Accelerating Value-Based Care Transformation Today and Post COVID-19

Accelerating Value-Based Care Transformation Today and Post COVID-19

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Black box economics: Russia’s internal struggle over classified financial data

Black box economics: Russia’s internal struggle over classified financial data

January 29, 2023

Black History: Pains and Chains

February 5, 2023
MFAH Gordan Parks’ Stokely Carmichael and Black Power Exhibit

MFAH Gordan Parks’ Stokely Carmichael and Black Power Exhibit

February 5, 2023
Deloitte Top 200: Top business leaders crowned with awards back in black tie

Deloitte Top 200: Top business leaders crowned with awards back in black tie

December 8, 2022
FAU Receives $1 Million NSF Grant to Empower Women in STEM Faculty

FAU Receives $1 Million NSF Grant to Empower Women in STEM Faculty

December 8, 2022
Retailers try to curb theft while not angering shoppers – ABC 10 News San Diego KGTV

Retailers try to curb theft while not angering shoppers – ABC 10 News San Diego KGTV

February 6, 2023
Proud Dad Celebrates Son Who Became a Pilot After 11 Years of Studying

Proud Dad Celebrates Son Who Became a Pilot After 11 Years of Studying

February 6, 2023
Black Woman Makes History, Wins First Place in Ms. Wheelchair 2023 Pageant

Black Woman Makes History, Wins First Place in Ms. Wheelchair 2023 Pageant

February 6, 2023
MFAH Gordan Parks’ Stokely Carmichael and Black Power Exhibit

MFAH Gordan Parks’ Stokely Carmichael and Black Power Exhibit

February 5, 2023
Xavier Houston Alumni Mardi Gras Gala

Xavier Houston Alumni Mardi Gras Gala

February 5, 2023

Recent News

Black-owned business near me: Chicago woman turns sweet hobby into new business venture after laid off during pandemic

Black-owned business near me: Chicago woman turns sweet hobby into new business venture after laid off during pandemic

February 1, 2023
Ebony G. Patterson Wins 2023 David C. Driskell Prize

Ebony G. Patterson Wins 2023 David C. Driskell Prize

January 31, 2023
Black-Owned Business Excellence Symposium Kicks Off Tomorrow in Tacoma

Black-Owned Business Excellence Symposium Kicks Off Tomorrow in Tacoma

February 1, 2023
Major League Baseball has diversity problem and no clear solution

Major League Baseball has diversity problem and no clear solution

February 1, 2023
OvaNewsBlast.com

A reliable source for African American news, from a different lens. Yours. News about us, by us.

Follow Us

Recent News

Retailers try to curb theft while not angering shoppers – ABC 10 News San Diego KGTV

Retailers try to curb theft while not angering shoppers – ABC 10 News San Diego KGTV

February 6, 2023
Proud Dad Celebrates Son Who Became a Pilot After 11 Years of Studying

Proud Dad Celebrates Son Who Became a Pilot After 11 Years of Studying

February 6, 2023

Topics to cover !

  • African Americans
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • News
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Get in Touch
  • Get in Touch with our Support!
  • Privacy Policy

© 2020 ovanewsblast.com - All rights reserved!   Download Our App   Read News on odbnewsblast.com

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • African Americans
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Entertainment

© 2020 ovanewsblast.com - All rights reserved!   Download Our App   Read News on odbnewsblast.com