Occupying Corporations: How to Cut Corporate Power
“Corporations are people, my friend.” Mitt Romney at Iowa State Fair
Corporations are obviously not people. But Romney is accurate in the
sense that corporations have hijacked most of the rights of people
while evading the responsibilities. An important part of the social
justice agenda is democratizing corporations. This means we must
radically change the laws so people can be in charge of corporations.
We must strip them of corporate personhood and cut them down to size so
democracy can work. People are taking action so democracy can regulate
the size, scope and actions of corporations.
One of the most basic roles of society is to protect the people from
harm. The massive size of many international corporations makes
democratic control over them nearly impossible.
Corporate crime is widespread. The New York Times, ProPublica and
others have revealed Wall Street giants like JPMorgan, Citigroup, Bank
of America and Goldman Sachs have been charged with fraud many times
only to get off by paying hundreds of millions. Professors at
University of Virginia have documented hundreds of corporations which
have been found guilty or pled guilty in federal courts.
Corporate abuse is even more widespread. For example, Corporate
Accountability International named six to its Corporate Hall of Shame,
including: Koch Industries for spending over $50 million to fund climate
change denial; Monsanto for mass producing cancer causing chemicals;
Chevron for dumping more than 18 billion gallons of toxic waste into the
Ecuadorian Amazon; Exxon Mobil for being the worst polluter; Blackwater
(now Xe) for killing unarmed Iraqi civilians and hiring paramilitaries;
and Halliburton, the nation’s leading war profiteer.
Making corporations responsible to democracy of the people is
challenging considering Wal-Mart, the world’s biggest corporation, does
more business itself annually than all but two dozen of the two hundred
plus countries in the world. Without dramatic changes, how can we
expect people in small or even big countries to force corporations like
Wal-Mart, Royal Dutch Shell, Exxon Mobil, BP, Toyota or Chevron to live
by the same rules all the people have to?
Justice demands we make sure corporations do not harm people. Democracy must require that they operate for the common good.
In order to cut corporations down to size, the people must strip
corporations of the special artificial legal protections they have
created for themselves.
The story of how corporations took the full rights of legal persons
in one of the great perverse tragedies in legal history. Corporations
have worked the courts mercilessly since 1819 to take a wide variety of
constitutional rights that were designed to cover only people. For
example, the Fourteenth Amendment was passed in 1868 to make sure all
citizens, particularly freed slaves and people of color, had full
rights. There was no mention of protecting corporations. But
corporations jumped on this opportunity resulting in a questionable
Supreme Court decision that granted them legal personhood. At roughly
the same time, the Supreme Court approved “separate but equal” racial
segregation. Thus in thirty years, African Americans lost their legal
personhood, while corporations acquired theirs.
Corporations now claim: 1st amendment free speech rights to advertise and influence elections: 4th amendment search and seizure rights to resist subpoenas and challenges to their criminal actions; 5th amendment rights to due process; 14th
amendment rights to due process where corporations took the rights of
former slaves and used them for corporate protection; plus rights under
the Commerce and Contracts clauses of the constitution.
The most recent corporate judicial takeover of constitutional rights
is the 2010 Supreme Court decision in Citizens United versus the Federal
Election Commission. The court ruled that corporations are protected
by the First Amendment so they can use their money to influence
elections.
Because of the bad Supreme Court decisions, it takes a constitutional
amendment by the people to change the laws back. An amendment requires
two-thirds of both houses of Congress to agree then three-quarters of
the states must vote to ratify. This will take real work. But despite
the growing size and unrestricted power of corporations, people are
fighting back.
Dozens of groups are working to reverse Citizens United and restore
limits on corporate election advocacy. In January 2011, groups
delivered petitions signed by over 750,000 people calling on Congress to
amend the Constitution and reverse the decision. More than 350 local
events were held in late January 2012 to challenge the Citizens United
decision.
Groups challenging this injustice include Code Pink, Common Cause,
Free Speech for People, Moveon.org, Move to Amend, National Lawyers
Guild, POCLAD, Public Citizen, People for American Way, The Center for
Media and Democracy, and Women’s League for Peace and Freedom.
Many groups are asking for a broad constitutional amendment that
makes it clear that corporations are not people and should not be given
any constitutional rights. Representatives Ted Deutsch of Florida, Jim
McGovern of Massachusetts and Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont have
sponsored bills in Congress to start the process for a constitutional
amendment to make it clear that corporations are not people, are not
entitled to the rights of people, and cannot contribute to political
campaigns.
There are also many energetic actions at the state level. People for
the American Way list organizational efforts in nearly all 50 states to
end corporate influence in elections or amend the constitution.
Massive corporations now rule the earth. But they are recent
arrivals which can and should be dispatched. It is time for people to
again take control. The legal fiction of corporate personhood and the
constitutional rights taken by corporations must cease. Join the
efforts to cut them down to size and restore the right of the people to
govern.
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