Georgia’s voter integrity law is being dragged through the mud by the left. To be clear, protecting the electoral process from potential fraud is not racist. Yet leftist activists have co-opted hundreds of American companies to join them in an assault on this law and similar protections offered and enacted nationwide. The National Center’s Free Enterprise Project (FEP) is pushing back against this effort – and getting results. In a Townhall commentary, FEP Deputy Director Scott Shepard chronicles how FEP’s shareholder activists have challenged this “hasty, thoughtless opposition” at four recent corporate investor meetings. At Coca-Cola, “CEO James Quincey backpedaled from the company’s opposition to the law, instead simply offering pablum about wanting open access to elections.” Scott responds: Well, yes, Jim, everybody does. Open access for each adult to cast one ballot – with no 3 a.m. boxes of magical ballots. It’s pretty clear that you’re now fully aware that the Georgia law is not, as you earlier asserted, “unacceptable, it is a step backward and it does not promote principles we have stood for in Georgia,” including “ensuring election integrity.” But now you owe the people of Georgia an apology for defaming them. When can we look for that?
At the Bank of America (BoA) shareholder meeting: CEO Brian Moynihan… [was] specifically asked when Bank of America was going to stop requiring IDs to borrow money, enter their facilities, vote at their shareholder meetings, and the like. Moynihan retreated, squirmed, evaded. He said that BoA does not oppose voter ID, a detail he’s excluded from his denunciations of the Georgia law. He then backed off those denunciations entirely, admitting that the law was – gosh golly – more complicated than he’d bothered to discover before stirring up civic strife with his virtue-signaling opposition. Finally, he called for the convening of a “bipartisan commission” to study how to make elections reliable and trusted.
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