With the Democratic takeover of Congress (powered by the far Left) not only do the aforementioned issues still exist; they are amplified. To fully appreciate why, a little background on the genesis of the CSR movement is necessary. In his 2004 book, Biz-War and the Out-of-Power Elite: The Progressive-Left Attack on the Corporation, Jarol B. Manheim describes the relationship between the Progressive-Left’s loss of political power, culminating in the Republican Revolution of 1994, and the rise of CSR. Manheim goes through painstaking detail to illustrate the Progressive-Left’s plan of capturing the money, power and influence of corporations. The plan involves painting Big Business and capitalism as an enemy of the public. Once vilified, the next stage is for the CSR advocates to offer corporations the one and only redemption: buy credibility through the implementation of CSR programs that redeem the corporate evil-doers by promoting the CSR advocates’ preferred social goals.
Once companies have accepted the CSR paradigm, they are on the slippery slope of the Progressive-Left (now CSR advocates) agenda. Having won the hearts and minds of corporate executives through coercion, corporations become an instrument to implement the Progressive-Left’s agenda. Despised Big Businesses have become a Trojan-Horse from which the Progressive-Left can implement the policies, which voters rejected at the ballot box, one company at a time.
The CSR advocates have been reasonably successful implementing this plan as more and more companies implement CSR programs and monitor their “Triple Bottom Lines”. The Triple Bottom Line being a construct created by the CSR advocates themselves that forces companies to report on their success at implementing the Progressive Left’s social programs in addition to their financial goals. As discussed in previous columns, these successes are weakening the economic vitality of our economy. But, now things are worse.
A Democratic Congress (with a far Left leadership) creates a natural ally for the CSR advocates; and vice versa. For the CSR advocates, they now have a Congress with a friendly ear toward implementing regulations with the stated purpose of controlling capitalism to ensure that it “works for the benefit of all people”. The legislators are consequently all too happy to codify the behaviors and activities the CSR advocates have been “persuading” companies to implement for years. For the Democratic Congress, the CSR advocates, and especially the corporations that have been brow-beaten into advocating the CSR policies, provide important political cover for increasing the regulatory burdens on industry. As opposed to having to explain to their constituents why they sided with anti-business activists, the Democratic Congress can “truthfully” explain that a broad coalition of corporate and public interest groups illustrated why the higher regulations are good for our country.
Should this scenario play out, the hard work and planning of the CSR advocates will begin to meet with even greater success than they have achieved to date. Their desire to use Corporate America as their Trojan-Horse would no longer be constrained to a company-by-company assault. Instead, CSR advocates can now enter the halls of a Congress that is sympathetic to their cause and push for greater labor, environmental, and social regulations all disguised as an initiative of Corporate America.
A Congress that is philosophically inclined to side with the positions of CSR advocates raises the stakes in the battle for the corporate boardroom. How advocates of free-markets and limited government respond to this changed landscape will help shape the future vitality of our economy.