Conservative group calls on Republicans to disavow 'left-leaning'
companies
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[September 24, 2022]
By David Morgan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -A leading U.S.
conservative group is pressuring Republicans in the U.S. House of
Representatives to shun "left-leaning" corporations that take stances on
social issues such as abortion, election reform and LGBTQ rights, in
exchange for its endorsement for party leadership positions.
As House Republicans began rolling out their campaign agenda for the
Nov. 8 midterm elections, the influential Conservative Political Action
Conference, or CPAC, called on the lawmakers to pledge not to meet with
executives and lobbyists from companies that "have been hostile to
policies that help all Americans."
"This is the Republican Party's moment to declare independence from
corporate special interest money that flows from left-leaning large
publicly traded companies," CPAC Chairman Matt Schlapp said in a Sept.
22 letter sent to more than 200 House Republican lawmakers.
The letter, based on the expectation that Republicans would regain
control of the House in November, represents the latest push by the
political right to reset the Republican Party's once close relationship
with corporate America since Donald Trump's presidency.
Recent months have seen politicians, including Florida Governor Ron
DeSantis, a potential 2024 White House candidate, strip Walt Disney Co
of its self-governing status, after it opposed a new state law limiting
discussion of LGBTQ issues in schools.
Republicans also expressed anger after companies, including Citigroup,
Levi Strauss & Co and Amazon.com Inc, said they would pay for employees
who lived in states where abortion has been banned to travel out of
state to obtain the procedure.
The CEOs of banks, including Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase & Co and Wells
Fargo took a grilling in Congress on Thursday over their companies'
having taken stances on social issues.
"I can't help but observe that when banks do weigh-in on highly charged
social and political issues, they seem to always come down on the
liberal side," said Republican Senator Pat Toomey during Thursday's
hearing.
CPAC represents a movement of Trump-led conservatives that has steadily
gained influence within the Republican Party in recent years. But it was
unclear how much sway CPAC might wield in internal House Republican
politics.
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General view of the U.S. Capitol as the
House of Representatives takes up debate of U.S. President Joe
Biden's $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief plan in Washington, U.S.,
March 8, 2021. REUTERS/Joshua Roberts/File Photo
GROWING CAMPAIGN
Republicans in Congress and across conservative-led states have
railed against companies for taking what they see as "liberal"
stances on environmental, social and governance issues.
Schlapp said companies have "colluded" with Democratic President Joe
Biden's administration to "silence" conservatives, promoted "lies"
about voter ID laws, withheld support from conservatives who back
"fair elections," paid travel costs for employee abortions and
promoted "radical gender theory."
That came as Republican leader Kevin McCarthy and members of his
caucus sought to unify their party's focus on their "Commitment to
America" agenda, which is intended to offer voters solutions to
social and economic ills ranging from inflation and high energy
prices to crime rates and border security, which Republicans blame
on Democrats.
The agenda, formally unveiled on Friday at an event in Pennsylvania,
makes no mention of "left-leaning" companies but puts a priority on
abortion restrictions, voter ID laws, reining in Big Tech and
keeping transgender women out of women's sports.
Control of the Senate is up for grabs in November. Nonpartisan
election analysts see Republicans as set to erase Democrats' 221-212
House majority. Doing so would give them the power to block Biden's
legislative agenda and to launch potentially politically damaging
investigations into his administration.
Democrats' fortunes have improved in recent weeks. A national
Reuters/Ipsos poll concluded on Sept. 12 found that 37% of Americans
would prefer to vote for a Democratic congressional candidate, with
34% preferring Republicans and 15% still undecided.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, the chamber's top Democrat, denounced
the Republican agenda on Friday as an "alarming new extreme MAGA
platform threatens to criminalize women's health care, slash
seniors' Medicare and raise prescription drug prices, and attack our
free and fair elections." MAGA is an acronym for Trump's "Make
America Great Again" slogan.
(Reporting by David Morgan; editing by Scott Malone, Jonathan Oatis
and Aurora Ellis)
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