guardian.co.uk,
Karen McVeigh, Thursday 5 April 2012
Color of Change had criticised both PepsiCo and Coca-Cola over their ties to the America Legislative Exchange Council. Photograph: David Levene for the Guardian |
Coca-Cola
and PepsiCo have ended their partnerships with a conservative group that
supports the spread of restrictive voting laws and stand-your-ground
legislation.
The
announcements came after campaigners urged consumers to boycott companies
linked with the the the American Legislative Exchange Council (Alec).
PepsiCo
ended its membership in the group in January, but it was first reported by NPR on Thursday
Coca-Cola's
announcement that it had also severed ties with the organisation came on
Wednesday after Color of Change, the nation's largest African-American advocacy
group, urged its members to boycott the company and other member corporations
over their links with Alec.
Alec is a
nonprofit member organisation whose stated purpose is the advancement of
free-market principles, limited government, federalism and individual liberty.
It drafts legislation on behalf of its individual and corporate members to
develop what it calls "model laws" and sends them to lawmakers.
Its
critics, including Color of Change, accuse it of working to disenfranchise
minority and low-income voters by supporting the co-ordinated proliferation of
voter ID laws which affect these groups.
It is also
accused of encouraging up to 20 other states to enact similar measures to
Florida's controversial stand-your-ground law.
Rashad
Robinson, executive director of Color of Change, said it had been in dialogue
with Coca-Cola since last year over the issue. He said: "We welcome
Coca-Cola's decision to stop supporting the American Legislative Exchange
Council, an organization which has worked to disenfranchise African-Americans,
Latinos, students, the elderly, the disabled and the poor. We confirmed with
Coca-Cola that they are no longer a member of Alec and no longer fund the group
in any capacity."
Robinson
said that hundreds of their members began calling Coca-Cola on Wednesday morning,
and "the company listened to their voices".
"We
continue to call on all major corporations to stop supporting voter suppression
through Alec. Our members are prepared to hold accountable companies that
continue to participate in Alec's attack on voting rights."
More than
85,000 members signed a petition targeting Alec's corporate partners for their
role in suppressing the black vote, and 170,000 have signed a petition calling
on the department of justice to take over the case of Trayvon Martin, the
unarmed black teenager fatally shot by a neighbourhood watch volunteer who
claimed self defence, arrest his killer and review the police investigation of the case.
In a
statement emailed to the Guardian, Coca-Cola confirmed it was ending its
relationship with Alec.
Diana Garza
Ciarlante, a Coca-Cola spokeswoman, said in the statement: "The Coca-Cola
company has elected to discontinue its membership with the American Legislative
Exchange Council (Alec). Our involvement with Alec was focused on efforts to
oppose discriminatory food and beverage taxes, not on issues that have no
direct bearing on our business. We have a long-standing policy of only taking
positions on issues that impact our company and industry."
On
Wednesday, the Center for American Progress published a report on the proliferation of voter ID laws which it said were "hindering voting rights
in a manner not seen since the era of Jim Crow".
Last month,
leaders of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People
called on the UN human rights council to investigate the proliferation of
restrictive electoral laws.
PepsiCo was
a member of Alec for 10 years. In January, according to NPR, a company
vice-president told Color Of Change that it would not renew its membership for
2012.
Alec did
not respond immediately to a request for comment.
On its website it acknowledges that Florida's stand-your-ground law was a basis for
its model legislation but expressed scepticism that the law could apply in the
Martin case.
"Florida's
'Stand Your Ground' law was the basis for the American Legislative Exchange
Council's model legislation, not the other way around. Moreover, it is unclear
whether that law could apply to this case at all. 'Stand Your Ground' or the
'Castle Doctrine' is designed to protect people who defend themselves from
imminent death and great bodily harm.
"It
does not allow you to pursue another person. It does not allow you to seek
confrontation. It does not allow you to attack someone who does not pose an
imminent threat. What it does is allow you to defend yourself and your family
from immediate and real danger."
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