1. In the last two months, the @USChamber has dramatically changed its view on members of Congress who tried to overturn the election and install Trump for a second term.
@USChamber 2. "Efforts by some members of Congress to disregard certified election results in an effort to change the election outcome… undermines our democracy and the rule of law," the Chamber said in a January 4 statement.
3. But in a memo released on Friday, the @USChamber says there is a "meaningful difference" between those votes (objecting to the Electoral College) and "actions that undermine the legitimacy of our elections."
4. On January 12, @USChamber Executive Vice President Neil Bradley praised companies suspending donations to members of Congress who objected to the Electoral College. Bradley said those companies were "stepping up" to help "restore democratic norms."
5. Now, the @USChamber says that cutting off donations to members of Congress who objected to certifying the Electoral College on January 6 is "not appropriate."
Nothing about those votes has changed in the last two months.
@USChamber 6. On 1/12, @USChamber promised it would "have a lot more to say about the members whose actions last week... will have cost them the Chamber’s support."
Two months later, the Chamber hasn't identified a single member of Congress who it won't support
There's a bill that would require mail-in ballots to be returned in person (😕) and one that would invalidate ballots that aren't postmarked 5 days BEFORE Election Day
2. No excuse absentee voting was a policy created in 2005 by REPUBLICANS in the Georgia legislature and signed into law by the REPUBLICAN Governor, Sonny Perdue
It was part of a package of voting changes, including requiring a photo ID to vote in person
@Delta How can @Delta claim to be committed to "state legislation that fights discrimination and advocates for just and equal treatment" but not speak out against Georgia's voter suppression bills, which are universally opposed by the civil rights community?
Biden succeeded in creating a bill with broad bipartisan support. Republicans have decided to just rerun their 2009 playbook of unified opposition.
One of the most common mistakes in politics is failing to recognize changing circumstances. Unlike 2009, this relief package appears big enough to meet the challenge of the moment. Im 2010, America was still slogging its way out of a recession. 2022 could be much better.
BREAKING: In a memo, the @USChamber attempts to provide cover to corporations to resume donating to the 147 Republicans who voted to overturn the election
"We do not believe it's appropriate to judge members of Congress solely based on their votes on the electoral certification"
@USChamber The memo written by @USChamber's National Political Director, @ashleewrich, argues that only members of Congress involved in "organizing the rally of January 6th or continuing to push debunked conspiracy theories" are culpable