Does Subaru really support Voting Rights?
Subaru is owned by Toyota
Toyota's position on voting rights is that people who own shares in the company should be able to vote on matters that affect the company. This position is poor because it gives shareholders too much say in the running of the company and does not take into account the interests of other stakeholders, such as employees.
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The January 6 corporate accountability index
After a violent mob stormed the Capitol building in January, hundreds of corporations pledged to make changes to their political giving. Some corporations pledged to withhold PAC funding to the 147 Republicans who voted to overturn the election, setting the stage for the riot. Other corporations said they were suspending all PAC activity and others promised to reevaluate their giving criteria in light of the violence.
by Popular Information
These corporations broke the commitments they made after January 6
It's been nearly five months since the attack on the United States Capitol. But in many respects, nothing has changed. None of the 147 Republicans who voted to overturn the election on January 6 — fueling the lie that motivated the attack — have expressed contrition or remorse. Several have attempted to
by Popular Information
Toyota leads companies in election-objector donations
The Japanese automaker gave $55,000 to 37 GOP objectors this year.
by Axios
Toyota stops donations to election objectors after PAC takes ads out against company
Like other companies, Toyota said it would suspend and review PAC donations after Trump supporters mobbed the U.S. Capitol — until it didn't.
by Detroit News