‘Woke’ Discriminatory Corporate Policies Withering Away

in Current Events, This Week

By Larry Keane

The idea of “woke” Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) policies continues to wither away. That’s good news for the firearm and ammunition industry, which has been the focus of corporations seeking to force public policies by the might of their corporate largess. It turns out that those lofty ideals aren’t so lofty after all. They’re more of a millstone weighing them down and more corporations are ditching their ESG programs.

BlackRock, the world’s biggest asset manager, announced last week a cut for support of shareholder proposals for ESG initiatives to a low of 4.1 percent. That’s down from 6.7 percent in 2023 and 47 percent from 2020-2021.

“In our assessment, the majority of these (proposals) were over-reaching, lacked economic merit, or sought outcomes that were unlikely to promote long-term shareholder value,” said its “2024 Global Voting Spotlight” report, according to Reuters.

In other words, the global investment firm is telling their shareholders that “woke” ideologies don’t pay. In fact, they’re likely to cost corporations in the long run. Turns out, investors don’t want their money going to push public policies that exceed the law. They want business to be business. Public policy is best left to politicians, who voters can hold accountable at the ballot box.

Bikes and Booze

They’re not the only ones. Famed American brands are learning that “woke” policies don’t pay the bills. Harley-Davidson CEO Jochen Zeitz brought German ESG thinking to the American icon and now fans of the rumbling motorcycles are up in arms. A video of Zeitz from 2020 surfaced where he said, “We are trying to take on traditional capitalism and trying to redefine it.” Harley-Davidson responded quicker than the kill switch on their bikes and announced it was scaling back their ESG programs.

Jack Daniel’s, the iconic Tennessee whiskey distiller, found their own brand embroiled in ESG madness. Brown-Forman, the parent company, pre-emptively announced their ESG programs would be rolled back after their own corporate programs were exposed. Now that’s something I can toast.

NSSF has been vocal and active in eliminating ESG policies that put special-interest public policy goals ahead free market enterprise. These “woke” policies have resulted in financial and corporate discrimination against the firearm and ammunition industry. Policies adopted by nameless and faceless corporate boardrooms in Wall Street ivory towers have purposefully discriminated against firearm-related businesses all because those boardroom executives would rather cozy up to far-left gun control groups at corporate cocktail parties instead of providing fair access to businesses that make legal products that are lawfully sold.

Leading the pack on these ESG “woke” policies has been corporate financial institutions, namely, JP Morgan Chase, Bank of America, Citigroup and Wells Fargo. Each of these corporate financial institutions embarked on “woke” corporate policies to deny firearm businesses access to financial services unless they adopted gun control policies that exceeded the law. That includes denying them banking services if they sell Modern Sporting Rifles (MSRs) the most popular rifle sold, standard-capacity magazines and even if they don’t refuse to sell firearms to adults under the age of 21, even though the federal law says that anyone over the age of 18 can legally purchase a long gun if they pass and FBI National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS) verification.

Fighting Back

That prompted NSSF to work with state legislatures and Congress to introduce the Firearm Industry Nondiscrimination (FIND) Act. That law was passed by nine states, with Louisiana’s Gov. Jeff Landry being the most recent governor to sign the law. That was quickly followed by Louisiana’s state Treasurer John Fleming announcing that he recommended Bank of America “not be approved as an authorized fiscal agent” for state or municipal contracts because of their discriminatory policies against firearm businesses, among other politically incurred industries.

Bank of America actually blinked on their standoff of holding to their gun control ESG policies in June. Bank of America felt the financial consequences of its gun control agenda when they found themselves shut out of state contracts, particularly in Texas and Florida, especially after Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis signed an anti-ESG law in 2023 that bars state officials from investing public money to promote “woke” initiatives like banking discrimination against the firearm industry.  Gov. DeSantis promised in an X post that he would ensure the state enforces the law against “woke” banking discrimination. Bank of America announced it led to firearm companies on a case-by-case basis with “enhanced due diligence” according to the bank’s latest Environmental and Social Risk Policy (ESRP). Any tangible change in policy has yet to be seen.

The NSSF-supported FIND Act is awaiting action in Congress. Introduced in the U.S. House of Representatives by Congressman Jack Bergman (R-Mich.) as H.R. 53 with 128 co-sponsors and by U.S. Sen. Steve Daines in the Senate as S. 428 with 17 co-sponsors, the bill would bar any corporate entity that holds discriminatory policies against the firearm industry from competing for federal contracts.

Those bills are in addition to the NSSF-supported Fair Access to Banking Act, introduced in the House of Representatives by Rep. Andy Barr (R-Ky.) as H.R. 2743 with 109 co-sponsors and the Senate by Sen. Kevin Cramer as S. 293 with 36 co-sponsors. The Fair Access to Banking Act would stop corporate banks from picking winners and losers based on executives’ personal politics. It also protects banks from outside pressure by special interest groups seeking to use the banks as a political weapon to advance their agenda.

Corporations are learning, albeit very slowly, that going “woke” means “going broke.” If corporations won’t listen to investors that discriminatory ESG policies don’t make sense – and don’t add up the cents – it’s time from Congress to follow the lead of several states that have stepped in to put an end to these discriminatory policies against the firearm and ammunition industry.

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  • SJ_VB August 30, 2024, 1:06 pm

    You might want to mention the one-man force behind these changes, Robbie Starbuck. Without him you’d be towing your South Korean Harley-Davidson behind your made in Mexico Ford Electric Truck on your way home to cut the rainbow colored grass that you bought at Tractor Supply. Then you’d get to have a cold estrogen infused Jack Daniels Withkey with your widdle pinkey sticking out.

  • Steve August 30, 2024, 8:47 am

    Not once did this article mention the real force behind the anti ESG and DEI policy rot these companies implemented. That is Robby Starbuck who can be found on Musk’s X platform. Most of these corporate fools budged not one bit till Robby exposed thenm to consumers. Shame on you for not including him!

  • Kane August 28, 2024, 11:04 am

    I ended up in BOA after a series of mergers over several years that started with Talman Bank. After BOA got involved, in both word and deed, against the 2A, I pulled all my money out of BOA and told them why I had made this inconvenient finacial move. The financial “advisor” at the bank said they knew there would be people like me leaving but the higher ups decided that the policy was worth the back lash.

    What is amazing is that “fiduciary” institutions establish these social policies, putting dubious ethic decisions above client interest, and then the most basic ethical relationship within the bank becomes a total betrayal of the investor’s most basc intrests. For example, Wells Fargo used a toxic cross-sell metric to fleace their investors out of hundreds of millions of dollar$ (they were caught) while pushing “woke” policies that are “ethical” frauds and economic busts like ESG. False ethics pushed by the left wing that builds nothing, usurps everything and then points their greedy finger at their own clients.

    • gre wan August 30, 2024, 1:12 pm

      I used to have my FFL business accounts with BoA, including merchant (credit card) services. I also had personal banking, HELOC, mortgage and credit cards with them. They’ve lost accounts but for one credit card because of their hatred of me and my business. I just can’t sleep with the enemy, despite their having the best online banking website and convenient access to year-end reports on all transactions for tax returns. I too made clear my reasons for firing them, for all the good that might have done. I’d love to see the calculus on cost/benefit of going full leftist woke. Where’s the return on that investment?

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