“Civil liberties groups are ratcheting up pressure on major corporations based in Georgia – including Coca-Cola, Aflac, Delta Air Lines, Home Depot and UPS – to oppose a Republican-led effort to make it harder to vote in the Peach State. It’s a continuation of a dynamic that emerged after the Jan. 6 insurrection, when a violent mob stormed the U.S. Capitol on the erroneous belief that widespread fraud handed the 2020 election to President Biden: Facing intractable opposition from lawmakers determined to restrict voting, voting-rights advocates are taking their case directly to Republican lawmakers’ allies in the business community.”
“On Friday, the advocates scored a win when the Georgia Chamber of Commerce issued a statement expressing ‘concern and opposition’ to the measures under consideration in the legislature, which would end no-excuse absentee voting, limit early voting hours, restrict drop-boxes for mail ballots, and curtail early voting on Sundays. Representatives from Coca-Cola and Home Depot told The Washington Post that their companies are ‘aligned’ with the Chamber’s comments. But the activists want the Chamber’s individual member companies to do more – and they say the state’s Black voters, who make up 30 percent of the state’s electorate and have billions in collective spending power, are watching” – Washington Post.