Koch Industries Coached Own Employees On How To Vote In November Election

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The Nationย magazine has revealed that Koch Industries sent a letter to most of its 50,000 employees before the U.S. midterm elections in November 2010 advising them on whom to vote for. In โ€œBig Brothers: Thought Control at Koch,โ€ Mark Ames and Mike Elk expose the urgent โ€œelection packetโ€ [PDF]ย sent to tens of thousands of Koch employees complete with ample libertarian reading materials instructions and a list of eligible vote-worthy (conservative) candidates.ย 

As if this isnโ€™t disturbing enough, the letter warns employees them of the dire consequences to their families, their jobs and their country should they choose to voteย otherwise.ย 

This story raises alarming concerns about corporationsโ€™ ability to influece the ways in which their employees vote. According to Amy Goodman at Democracy Now!, Koch is entirely within its legal right to pressure people in this manner because of theย Citizens Unitedย Supreme Court decision. According toย Goodman,ย 

โ€œThe ruling granted free speech rights to corporations and effectively removed regulations preventing employers from politically manipulating their workers. In practice, employers can also fire workers who refuse to attend political seminars or dare to voice their dissenting opinions tooย loudly.โ€

Theย Citizens United v. Federal Election Commissionย ruling last year enabled corporations like Koch Industries to legally pressure their workers to adopt their political views. The brothers are two of the major bankrollers of the Tea Party movement and dozens of other right-wing causes, including recent attacks on public sector employees and unions inย Wisconsin.

In anย excerpt from theย packetย distributed onย October 4, 2010, Koch explains how its vision of the principles of economic freedom and market-basedย policies:

are now being strongly opposed by many politicians (and their media allies) who favor ever-increasing governmentโ€ฆ Even worse, recent government actions are threatening to bankrupt the countryโ€ฆ And the facts are that the overwhelming majority of the American people will be much worse off if government overspending is allowed to bankrupt theย country.

The Koch propaganda essentially amounts to a threat to employees with the loss of their jobs if a government less likely to cater to business interests were elected. Thatโ€™s a curious position since Koch Industriesโ€™ profits more than tripled in the last threeย years.

In a cover letter, Koch COO and president, Dave Robertson, implored the necessity of voting for candidates that will โ€œbest advance policies that create the economic conditions needed for employees and businesses such as ours to survive and prosperโ€. He uses this toย justify including a list of candidates in federal and local elections that Koch management suggests employees โ€œElect toย Prosperโ€.ย 

The Nation secured the list of Washington State candidates supported by Koch Industries. ย Of the 19-candidate list, 16 were Republicans, many of whom were Tea Party candidates. Of the three Democratic candidates, two were from a right-wing faction of the Democratic Party called the โ€œRoadkillย Caucus.โ€

Among the list of vote-worthy State House candidates,ย Shelly Shortย recently testified at an EPA hearing thatย climate change science is far from settled, and that models that include solar activity and natural climate variability need to be discussed more thoroughly. Shelly Short and Joel Kretzย authored a letter sent to the State Department of Ecology asking it to stop drafting rules regarding global warmingย pollution.ย 

Among State Senate candidate picks, Sen. Jerome Delvin introduced a bill that would withdraw Washington from participation in the Western Climate Initiative, a regional effort to reduce the pollution that contributes to climate change. According to the Delvin bill, state government should focus on jobs and the economy over environmental efforts during a recession. Short introduced a similarย bill.ย 

Of the two candidates running in national contests, both were climate change denying Tea Partyโ€“friendly Republicans. The first wasย Dino Rossi, who questions the science of man-made climate change and (somehow) believes that massively expanding highways is a terrific way to reduce CO2 emissions.

Jaime Herrera-Beutler, who ran in the Republican primary as a moderate but later affiliated with the Tea Party, voted in favour of bill HR 910 denying the EPA the authority to rein in global warming pollution, and challenging the science upon which those public protections are based. Herrera-Beutler also voted againstย an amendment stating Congress accepts EPAโ€™s โ€œscientific findings that climate change is occurring, is caused largely by human activities, and poses significant risks for public health andย welfare.โ€ย 

Head over to The Nation to readย more.ย 

Image Credit: Exiledย Online

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