Software company Intuit, the makers of programs such as Turbo Tax and Quicken, announced today that they will join Coca-Cola, PepsiCo and Kraft as the fourth company to end their partnership with the right-wing American Legislative Exchange Council this week.
The Center for Media & Democracy, which launched ALECexposed.com last year, broke the news:
A stampede seems to be on the way as more and more groups break ties and dump ALEC. Intuit, Inc. (maker of Quicken and QuickBooks accounting software) told the Center for Media and Democracy (CMD) that Intuit also decided not to renew its membership after it expired in 2011. That comment came from Bernie McKay, Vice President of Government Affairs. He gave this response when CMD identified that Intuit was no longer listed on the board and contacted the company. CMD began its effort to spotlight Intuit and other corporate funders and tie these corporations to the ALEC agenda when it launched ALECexposed.org in July 2011. … Intuit’s McKay explained to CMD that the company doesn’t “usually issue statements about membership in any organization” and declined to comment further.
Although Pepsi quietly left ALEC as recently as last January, the
growing exodus of companies’ from ALEC’s began earlier this week when
the progressive group Color of Change announced a petition and boycott
campaign targeting ALEC’s corporate supporters. Other corporations that have not yet publicly renounced their support of ALEC
include Koch Industries, Wal-Mart, Pfizer, Reynolds American,
Altria/Philip Morris, Procter & Gamble, Exxon Mobil and British
alcohol firm Diageo (makers of Smirnoff and Johnnie Walker).
As a recent Center for American Progress report
explains, ALEC is one of the leading proponents of so-called Voter ID
legislation that potentially disenfranchises millions of low-income,
minority, student and elderly voters in an effort to exclude groups that
tend to vote Democratic from the franchise. ALEC is also linked to
state “Stand Your Ground” laws that can potentially enable accused murders such as Trayvon Martin’s accused assailant George Zimmerman to remain free.
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