Corporate
America Doesn’t Qualify for Moral Leadership Either
By
Phil Mattera for the Dirt Diggers Digest
It
may turn out that Donald Trump’s greatest contribution to American business is
allowing the chief executives of tainted corporations to take a morally
superior posture toward a presidency that seems to be completely devoid of
principle. Their brands are boosted as his becomes increasingly toxic.
It
is a good thing that big business is taking steps to separate itself from
Trump. The collapse of the two advisory councils is not only a rebuke to
Trump’s offensive comments on the events in Charlottesville but also an overdue
retreat from entities that were set up mainly to foster the illusion that this
administration is taking serious steps to reform the economy.
Yet
it is dismaying that the moral vacuum created by Trump is being filled by the
likes of Walmart chief executive Douglas McMillon, who got himself featured on
the front page of the New York Times for a statement criticizing Trump.
For years the giant retailer was a national symbol of discriminatory practices. In 2009 it had to pay $17.5 million to settle a lawsuit alleging that it discriminated against African-Americans in the recruitment and hiring of truck drivers.
The company was also widely accusing of gender discrimination. In 2010 the company was required to pay $11.7 million to settle a case brought by the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, and it was facing potential damages in the billions from a class action suit brought on behalf of more than 1 million female employees until the Supreme Court came to its rescue and threw out the case for what amounted to technical reasons.
In
addition to discrimination, Walmart has been at the center of countless
controversies involved wage theft, union-busting, tax
avoidance, bribery and much more.
After
Merck CEO Kenneth Frazier led the way among business critics of Trump’s embrace
of white nationalism, the president struck back with a tweet referring to “ripoff
drug prices.” While Trump was just being vindictive, it’s true that Merck’s
reputation is far from untarnished.
In
2011 the drugmaker agreed to pay a $321 million criminal
fine and a $628 million civil settlement to resolve allegations that it
illegally promoted and marketed the painkiller Vioxx.
This came after Merck had to remove the drug from the market in the wake of reports that the company for years covered up evidence of serious safety issues surrounding its blockbuster product. This is just one of a long list of its cases involving illegal marketing, overbilling, false claims and anti-competitive practices.
This came after Merck had to remove the drug from the market in the wake of reports that the company for years covered up evidence of serious safety issues surrounding its blockbuster product. This is just one of a long list of its cases involving illegal marketing, overbilling, false claims and anti-competitive practices.
Another
of the CEOs who spoke out in response to Trump’s comments was JPMorgan Chase’s
Jamie Dimon. Earlier this year, the bank had to pay $53 million to settle a case
brought by the U.S. Attorney in Manhattan accusing it of engaging in
discrimination on the basis of race and national origin in its mortgage
business.
JPMorgan
Chase was one of the parties that helped bring about the financial collapse of
a decade ago, and in 2013 it agreed to a $13 billion settlement of
federal and state allegations relating to the packaging and sale of toxic
mortgage-backed securities.
In
2015 JPMorgan had to pay a $550 million criminal fine to
resolve federal charges that it and other large banks conspired to manipulate
foreign exchange markets. There are many more entries in the corporate
rap sheet of this company, which since the beginning of 2010
has had to pay out more than $28 billion in fines and settlements.
It
would be difficult to find any members of the disbanded advisory councils whose
companies have not engaged in serious misconduct of one sort or another.
Such
is the peril of looking for paradigms of virtue in the business world.
Corporate executives should, along with many others, speak out against Trump’s
reprehensible comments, but they cannot lay claim to moral leadership.