4. Apple's leverage rests in its status as a major employer and driver of economic growth.
Thus far, however, Apple and other companies have been unwilling to make any public statements about reproductive rights that could impact its bottom line.
5. Ultimately, this could backfire. Apple is going to need to recruit thousands of new employees for its Austin Texas and many college-educated workers don't want to work in places with draconian limits on reproductive rights
6. We'll see how sustainable it is for @Apple and others to maintain public "neutrality" on a law that places bounties on anyone who helps women exercise their Constitutional rights
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@Sen_JoeManchin 2. A popular.info review of the Senate Lobbying Database found that six former Manchin staffers are currently listed on 15 lobbying contracts with fossil fuel and energy companies
Collectively, these contracts are worth $2.4 million per year
2. @UPS, which suspended all donations after 1/6, had donated to a handful of GOP objectors earlier this year.
But, in August, it really kicked things into high gear.
UPS donated $78,500 to 30 Republican objectors
3. After 1/6, @Pfizer said: "[W]e have made the decision that for the next six months, Pfizer PAC will not contribute to any of the 147 Members of Congress who voted against certifying the Electoral College after the violence that we all witnessed"
3. Right now, extremely rich people can accumulate billions in wealth gains throughout their lifetime through capital gains from stocks and other assets
But they can avoid paying taxes by passing those assets onto their heirs
1. The California recall was unsuccessful. But it was part of a much larger strategy to orient Republican politics around undermining & overturning democratic outcomes
Elder ultimately conceded. But he preemptive declared himself a victim of voter fraud
3. Trump, of course, actively supported the Elder campaign's baseless claims
But he's also engaged in a much more alarming effort to put voter fraud conspiracy theorists in charge of election administration in key states like Georgia, Arizona, & Michigan
2. Exclusive new data reveals that in seven key states (AR, FL, SC, SD, KY, OK, OH) Fortune 250 corporations donated $5.7M to legislators that oppose abortion rights and just $1M to legislators that support abortion rights in the 2020 cycle
3. The data undermines the idea that corporate donations are inconsequential because corps give equally to "both sides." In the states where abortion rights are most at risk, corps are providing a 5-to-1 financial advantage to anti-abortion legislators.