The American Civil Liberties Union
ACLU
Senate
D-NY
Coca-Cola
Delta
Starbucks
Amazon
Netflix
CNBC
NCAA
H.R. 1
Rogers
MediaPoliticsBrian Kempelection
the People ActGeorgiaJim CrowRon
Brian Kemp
Jim Crow
Chuck
Schumer
Joe Biden
Tom Rogers
Ron DeSantis
Omari Hardy
fraudVoter IDvoting
Breitbart
Republican
Democrats
Americans
No matching tags
S.B. 202
Georgia
Texas
Pennsylvania
U.S.
Florida
No matching tags
Coca-Cola and Delta spoke out against Georgia’s election law, specifically, and in April, hundreds of companies, including Starbucks, Amazon, and Netflix, signed a letter signaling their opposition to state election integrity efforts — efforts that include basic voter ID measures, which a majority of Americans support.But now, according to CNBC, corporate leaders are embracing a different approach, taking their attacks “behind the scenes”:Since the outcry earlier this year over the passage of Georgia’s new voting law, which critics say unfairly targets minorities, many executives and companies are now airing out their concerns in private, according to multiple people briefed on the matter.
As said here by Hannah Bleau