Warren, a progressive former U.S. presidential candidate,
blasted the entertainment company for the layoffs that came as
Disney reportedly restored pay for some executives who had taken
cuts due to the pandemic, according to a letter the
Massachusetts senator sent to Disney on Tuesday and seen by
Reuters.
Warren described Disney's decision to pay dividends and buy back
stock before the pandemic as "short-sighted," because it reduced
the capital the company could have used to weather the downturn.
"I would like to know whether Disney’s financial decisions have
impacted the company’s decision to lay off workers," Warren
wrote. "It appears that – prior to, and during the pandemic –
Disney took good care of its top executives and shareholders –
and now is hanging its front-line workers out to dry."
Disney did not immediately provide a comment. Warren said she
appreciated that Disney has continued to provide healthcare
benefits to furloughed workers for the last six months.
Activist investor Daniel Loeb of hedge fund Third Point said the
company should permanently end its dividend, after Disney
suspended it in May, and invest in streaming programming
instead.
Roughly two-thirds of the 28,000 workers Disney said last month
it was laying off were part-time. Disneyland, the company's
theme park in California, remains shut due to the pandemic.
Abigail Disney, the grand-daughter of Disney co-founder Roy
Disney, has also criticized the company for how it has handled
the pandemic.
Warren has been targeting executives who are under increased
scrutiny as the economy falters from the pandemic, and as
workers and other elected officials press them on issues such as
racial justice and climate change.
Last month she criticized CEOs for failing to keep a pledge
backed by the trade group the Business Roundtable to consider
social responsibility above shareholder profits.
(Reporting by Jessica DiNapoli in New York; Additional reporting
by Lisa Richwine; Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman)
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