Kerala Ayurveda centre linked to CPM leader inks deal with firm backed by BJP Union minister

The Indian Express | 1 week ago | 20-04-2023 | 11:45 am

Kerala Ayurveda centre linked to CPM leader inks deal with firm backed by BJP Union minister

The CPI(M) and BJP are often at each other’s throats in Kerala. But, when an Ayurveda resort in which the family of senior CPI(M) leader E P Jayarajan has a stake wanted to rejuvenate its business, politics did not stand in the way and the operations were handed over to a hospitality venture backed by a private equity firm founded by Union Minister Rajeev Chandrasekhar of the BJP.The family of CPI(M) central committee member and Left Democratic Front (LDF) convener Jayarajan owns shares in Vaidekam Ayurvedic treatment centre in Kannur. A few days ago, it inked a deal — that came into effect on April 15 — with Niraamaya Retreats, that is backed by Jupiter Capital, the private equity firm founded by Chandrasekhar.Sources in the Vaidekam Ayurveda healing centre in Kannur’s Morazha village said operations had been handed over to Niraamaya Retreats, which operates several hospitality ventures in the country. “There is no politics in the deal. Vaidekam investors do not have any exposure in the hospitality industry and they were looking for a professional partner to run the Ayurvedic centre,” said a person familiar with the development.Jayarajan’s wife P K Indira and son Jaison hold shares in Vaidekam that was recently in the midst of a political storm after Jayarajan’s rivals in the CPI(M) sought a probe into the financial dealings of Jayarajan. The controversy over Vaidekam erupted last December after P Jayarajan, a senior leader from Kannur, was said to have questioned E P Jayarajan’s financial dealings. He is said to have raised the questions during a state committee meeting. At the time, CPI(M) state secretary M V Govindan, without referring to the resort issue, said, “There are wrong tendencies in the party, which will not be tolerated. If there are unacceptable tendencies, the party will intervene and correct them. Rectification is a continuing process.’’However, the issue died down after Govindan said in February that there was no probe against Jayarajan in the Vaidekam issue. However, in the meantime, the property came under the scanner of various central agencies, including the Income-Tax Department and the Enforcement Directorate (ED).Sources said the idea to hand over the operations of the Rs 21-crore resort to a professional player in the hospitality industry had come up before the directors much before the controversy. “Jayarajan has no involvement in the property. His wife and son have together made an investment of Rs 82 lakh. The project has 20 investors, with each investor assigned to put a share of Rs 50 lakh each. There was nothing shady in the venture, which had only Rs 25 lakh as turnover in the last year,’’ said a source.Jayarajan on Wednesday told the media in Kannur, “I want to see that institution emerge as a leading ayurvedic treatment centre. My wife and son are free to take any decision about their investments. I don’t want to reveal what has been discussed in the party. I have a clear idea about the entire controversy and I will take up it with the party if required. But I would never reveal it outside the party.”But, Leader of Opposition V D Satheesan of the Congress alleged there was politics behind the deal. “This is a give and take between the two sides. When CPI(M) leader was in trouble, BJP came to the rescue. There is a camaraderie between them,’’ he said.

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Looking to trump Cong in K'taka, BJP adds quota into Hindutva, Vikas mix
The Indian Express | 8 hours ago | 28-04-2023 | 11:45 am
The Indian Express
8 hours ago | 28-04-2023 | 11:45 am

Chitradurga exemplifies a Karnataka region where the Congress politics based on a social justice agenda had been swept aside over the years by the BJP riding on its formidable plank of Hindutva coupled with development.Caught in a fierce battle for the May 10 state Assembly elections, the ruling BJP and the principal Opposition Congress now brace for a tough duel in the Chitradurga region, whose parliamentary constituency comprises eight Assembly segments including two each from the Scheduled Castes (SCs) and the Scheduled Tribes (STs) communities.The region, once dominated by the Congress, has gradually been taken over by the BJP, which now accounts for six of its eight incumbent MLAs.The Basavaraj Bommai-led BJP government’s move late last year to increase the SCs quota from 15 to 17 per cent and the STs reservation from 3 to 7 per cent was aimed at consolidating the BJP’s support base among these communities, but in this region it is grappling with internal rebellion and triangular fights in the fray that would make the poll outcome unpredictable here, party leaders said.Raghu Achar, an influential Chitradurga Congress leader belonging to the Vishwakarma community, has switched to the JD (S) after being denied ticket. However, BJP leader N Y Gopalakrishna defected to the Congress and has got the latter’s ticket in Molakalmuru.Interestingly, the new contender Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) has fielded its candidates in several constituencies in the region – including Chitradurga, Hiriyur, Challakere and Holalkere seats – which has raised the possibility of a split in the floating votes, making the polls tougher for the established players.In a bid to retain its hold over the SCs, which account for 17.5 per cent of Karnataka’s population, the BJP government passed a bill in December to raise quotas for the SCs by 2 per cent and the STs by 4 per cent.According to BJP sources, there are 64 seats in the state in which the SC vote could be a key factor as their population in each of these seats is more than 15 per cent.Similarly, the vote of the ST communities, which make up about 6.95 per cent of the state’s population, could influence polls in 29 seats. In the 2018 elections, the BJP had won 22 of such SC and nine of these ST seats. Of the state’s 224 assembly seats, 36 are reserved for SCs and 15 for STs.Chitradurga is among the districts where caste plays a major role in the voting followed by accessibility of the contenders to locals as well as their development work. Many voters however do not seem to be taken with the quota politics, even as they want their legislators to boost their areas’ development.“We go by works done by the candidates and see who will be better for us,” said Bharat Kumar, who runs a shop on the outskirts of the town. “We do not know much about the reservation or quota nor about the controversy,” he added.Manikanta, an auto driver, said, “We have previously voted for the BJP but we have not seen any development over the past five years. Although the elders wish to vote for the incumbent party, most of the youngsters from the SC and ST communities have decided to bring about a change by voting for the Opposition party.” But Rudrappa, another auto-driver, was sure that the BJP would retain power.Referring to the Bommai government’s March 24 decision to carve out internal reservations in the 17 per cent SC quota, an official at the influential Muruga Rajendra Mutt said: “The creamy layer of the Scheduled Caste and Scheduled Tribe care about reservation but a large section of people who have not received basic education do not care about it. The new reservation policy might help the ruling party in wooing about 5-10 per cent of the voters.”“The votes of the SC and ST have been split between the BJP and the Congress over the years and people tend to vote for both,” he said, adding that the triangular fights and the rebel candidates would make it complicated for both the parties.While the Congress is relying on senior party leader and former CM Siddaramaiah for consolidating its support among the SCs, STs and Other Backward Classes (OBCs), the BJP is banking on its veteran and ex-CM B S Yeddyurappa, who still enjoys wide acceptability and support cutting across caste, communal and class lines, for retaining its support among these communities.According to the Mutt official, the SC and ST communities admire Prime Minister Narendra Modi but most of them voted for the BJP in the 2018 Assembly polls because of the Yediyurappa factor.Some voters made it clear that the BJP has emerged as a major player replacing the Congress in the SC/ST-dominated seats on account of its development plank and not by playing on sentiments. “The BJP will return to power this time as well. The sitting MLA has done a lot of development for the city by constructing roads and providing other facilities such as water and education. He has provided the people with the documents for their land,” said Ranganath, a resident of Chitradurga town. Its another resident Bharath said, “I am not sure which party might come to power but I think a lot could have been done in terms of development over the past few years.”Observers say the BJP’s intense campaign on the Hindutva plank to get numerous backward caste groups on board had worked in the 2018 polls, when the party could win five of the Chitradurga region’s eight seats. In 2020, the party also won the by-election to the Sira Assembly seat.“What came to the advantage of the BJP is its systematic work and the communication strategy. The party got an organised system at the ground level, which keeps propagating ‘Modi is Vishwaguru’ and that he would bring in development and jobs for the youth, while the grand old party has survived in the names of Gandhis and slogans like ‘Garibi Hatao’. The BJP-RSS’ efficient communication system has got the Gandhis’ name removed from good books of the people. They are also able to leverage the larger Hindu identity,” said a senior journalist, who has long been the region’s observer.He said, “While the BJP has a well-oiled, well-maintained machinery, the Congress is not able to utilise its organisational skills effectively and in a cohesive manner. Their (BJP’s) narrative of the ‘Congress is for Muslims’ also helped the saffron party to bring in various groups under the Hindutva identity.”However, BJP leader and ex-Chitradurga MP, Janardhana Swamy, said, “The voters in the region were tired of waiting to see the promises made by the Congress for the development of the region. The Upper Bhadra project which was meant to bring water for the arid lands in the district was launched in 2000 when the BJP government was in power at the Centre. This area started getting water from the project in 2010. And in the latest budget, the Centre has allocated Rs 5,300 crore for the project.”As the Chitradurga MP earlier, Swamy had worked closely with Yediyurappa for bringing the railway line to the district, which he said, has helped the farmers to market their produce better. “The railway line was a promise Indira Gandhi made when she fought election in Chikmagalur in 1978 and it got fulfilled under the BJP,” he claimed.BJP’s internal SC quotas move has triggered a political debate in the state, where the most backward SCs are known as SC-Left. The BJP claims the support of the SC-Left groups while the Congress is backed by the SC-Right communities.Union minister Shobha Karandlaje, who leads the BJP poll management committee, has claimed that even the SC-Right groups are shifting to the BJP.Congress MLA Rizwan Arshad however dismissed the Bommai government’s new quota policy. “The hopes of the SCs, STs and minorities lie with the Congress. We give representation to every section of the society. Sometimes hardline Hindutva confuses them but they can see through and we are sure they all will stand by the Congress. Because people of every section have seen and are tired of this corrupt government as it (corruption) disturbs them in their daily life,”Arshad said.

Looking to trump Cong in K'taka, BJP adds quota into Hindutva, Vikas mix
Meet the 51-yr-old ayurveda doctor who is behind the long march by tribal farmers
The Indian Express | 8 hours ago | 28-04-2023 | 11:45 am
The Indian Express
8 hours ago | 28-04-2023 | 11:45 am

He is an ayurveda doctor who dabbled in politics on both sides during his student days – the Left and Right. But today, Dr Ajit Navale has cemented his reputation as the face of Left-backed farm unions in the country — and more importantly, as the driving force behind the long marches by tribal farmers that have become a signature move of the All India Kisan Sabha.In the last five years, the Kisan Sabha, which is the CPI(M)’s farm wing, has managed to organise four long marches in which thousands of tribal farmers walked long distances to press for their demands, mainly related to land under the Forest Rights Act.For the 51-year-old Navale, who is the Kisan Sabha’s secretary, these marches are “steps” to bring the “real issues” back into the popular and political consciousness of the country. “Our main aim is to ensure that politics reverts back to issues rather than go with the present trend of identity, religion, caste, etc.,” he said.Navale spoke to The Indian Express in Maharashtra’s Akole where the Kisan Sabha brought together hundreds of tribal farmers over the past two days for a 53-km march to Loni in Ahmednagar, the home district of the state’s Revenue Minister Radhakrishna Vikhe Patil. The march was called off midway on Thursday after the state government gave several assurances to the farmers.An old hand in farm politics, Navale hails from Ahmednagar, too, and shot to fame in 2018 when the Kisan Sabha mobilised over 1 lakh tribal farmers to march to Mumbai from Nashik — the first such big move by the organisation. Since then, the Kisan Sabha and Navale have become the face of farm politics in the state and the country — from land rights to better payment for dairy farmers.“The main hindrance to the realisation of welfare schemes is the mentality of the political and bureaucratic set-ups. The implementation of the Forest Rights Act, which ensures land rights of tribal farmers, is stuck because the bureaucratic set-up in Maharashtra insists on documentation for transfer of land. The spirit of the Act is that the land should be transferred to tribals but this is not honoured in the state,” he said.But why these long marches? “The present political set-up is such that till we don’t hit the streets, we are not heard,” Navale said.

Meet the 51-yr-old ayurveda doctor who is behind the long march by tribal farmers
LoP’s office & car taken away, Congress leader meets people under tree at RMC
The Indian Express | 8 hours ago | 28-04-2023 | 11:45 am
The Indian Express
8 hours ago | 28-04-2023 | 11:45 am

A day after she vacated her office and surrendered her official vehicle, Congress’ Bhanu Sorani, Leader of Opposition (LoP) in the Rajkot Municipal Corporation (RMC), arrived at the RMC headquarters on Thursday in an autorickshaw and set up office in the civic body’s garden, where she met people under a tree.Sorani, Congress’ leader in the RMC, arrived at the civic body in the morning and headed straight to a red champa (plumeria) tree in the garden. Viral Bhatt, her secretary, tied a banner that read ‘Congress Karyalaya’ to the tree under which Sorani sat.On Wednesday, Sorani’s office and car – allotted by the RMC in 2021 – were taken away. This was a day after Rajkot Mayor Pradip Dav instructed that Sorani’s office and car services be withdrawn.Subsequently, the commissioner instructed the estate branch to take possession of the LoP office and the chief fire officer to take possession of Sorani’s car. However, Sorani herself went on to handover the car and the possession of her office on Wednesday morning.The decision comes on the heels of the mayor, other office-bearers and BJP corporators meeting Chief Minister Bhupendra Patel at the latter’s official residence in Gandhinagar on Tuesday. Hours after the meeting over lunch, the mayor had ordered that the services to the LoP be withdrawn.When contacted, Mayor Pradip Dav didn’t give any specific reason for withdrawing the services to Sorani but underlined that Congress has only two members in the 72-member RMC general board.“Congress had won only four of the 72 seats in RMC and thus, did not have the required numbers to get these services. Nonetheless, we provided the party office space and car. Now, the number of Congress corporators has shrunk to two and it was felt that there is no need to provide the party with such services anymore. So, we ordered that the services be withdrawn,” Dav said.“In the past, the BJP had provided such services to Ladhabhai (Borsadiya) despite him being the lone Congress member in the RMC general board. But you must also note that there is no LoP in Gujarat Assembly now,” he added.Maintaining that the closure of the LoP office won’t affect the people, Dav said, “Residents of the city won’t be affected in any manner by this order. We are there to listen to their grievances.”On Thursday, Sorani sat under the tree from 11 am to 1 pm and heard grievances of the people even as members from the RMC’s vigilance department and personnel of the ‘A’ Division police station hovered around. “We protested against the police presence, eventually, they allowed us to sit in the garden,” Bhatt said.Speaking to the media on Tuesday, Sorani had claimed that the ruling BJP had withdrawn the facilities, as she had cornered the saffron party on many occasions by raising people’s issues.Sorani vacating the LoP office and surrendering her official vehicle marks the first time in the history of the 51-year-long RMC when the civic body doesn’t have a recognised LoP. Nor is the Opposition represented in the RMC standing committee.Irrespective of the party in power, it has also been a convention in the RMC to make two Opposition councillors members of the standing committee. But that convention was broken when the BJP didn’t offer Congress a spot on the committee after the February 2021 election.Withdrawal of Sorani’s services also comes a day after the BJP withdrew services to the LoP in Junagadh Municipal Corporation, where Congress had won only three of the 60 seats.

LoP’s office & car taken away, Congress leader meets people under tree at RMC
Six councillors quit Congress in Punjab’s Bathinda
The Indian Express | 8 hours ago | 28-04-2023 | 11:45 am
The Indian Express
8 hours ago | 28-04-2023 | 11:45 am

Six municipal councillors from the Congress in Punjab’s Bathinda left the party on Thursday and early Friday, announcing their decisions on their social media pages. All the councillors are loyalists of former state finance minister Manpreet Singh Badal, who is now with the BJP.The councillors who quit Congress are Baljeet Kaur (Ward No 3), Baljit Singh Raju Sran (Ward No 10), Asesar Paswan (Ward No 12), Veerpal Kaur (Ward No 9), Sham Lal Jain (Ward No 24) and Sandeep Kumar Bobby ( Ward No 26).While Kaur, Sran and Paswan announced they were quitting Congress on Thursday, the others made the announcement on Friday morning. Though they are yet to indicate which party they are likely to switch to officially, BJP sources confirmed that all the councillors were actively campaigning for BJP candidate Inderiqbal Atwal in the Shahkot area of the Jalandhar parliamentary constituency.The Indian Express contacted Punjab Pradesh Congress Committee (PPCC) president Amrinder Singh Raja Warring but he did not respond to queries.Manpreet Singh Badal was the Bathinda Urban MLA from 2017-2022 and Bathinda Municipal Corporation elections were held during his tenure. Earlier on February 23, the Congress had expelled four councillors and the mayor of Bathinda from the party for six years on charges of anti-party activities. They too were Manpreet loyalists.Rajinder Singh Sidhu, a former councillor and husband of sitting councillor Baljeet Kaur, who left Congress on Thursday, said, “We all had earlier come from Shiromani Akali Dal and hence Congress was treating us like outsiders till now. We were feeling suffocated under the leadership of Congress district president Rajan Garg and also the working of Warring, hence we decided to quit the party. We will continue to serve the masses but we have not planned to join any political party till now.”Sidhu added that Manpreet Singh Badal had to be credited for “whatever development has taken place in Bathinda in the past” as he was the sitting Bathinda MLA and cabinet minister of Punjab as well”.Sran also pointed out how Manpreet Singh Badal gave the city “a state-of-the-art library, parking lot and many other development works”. “The current Congress leadership is not considering us part of the team so we are quitting the party,” he added.“Congress expelled five of our councillors in the past so I have decided to quit the party on my own. I will continue to work for the people of my ward like before,” Sandeep Kumar Bobby said.Sources added that all six councillors were set to be expelled from Congress as they were openly campaigning for BJP.Elections to Bathinda Municipal Corporation were held in February 2021 in which the Congress had won 43 seats out of 50. However, in August 2021, three Congress councillors – including Jagroop Singh Gill – joined the AAP. Gill later defeated Manpreet Singh Badal in the Assembly polls and became MLA from Bathinda Urban. This brought down the number of Congress councillors to 40. Later, one councillor of Shiromani Akali Dal joined Congress, taking the number to 41.In February, the Congress expelled Raman Goyal, the first woman mayor of Bathinda and a Manpreet loyalist, along with councillors Atma Singh (Ward No 40), Inderjit Singh (Ward No 44), Sukhraj Aulakh (Ward No 42) and Rattan Rahi (Ward No 46). Goyal is the councillor of Ward No 35.This brought down the Congress numbers to 36. With six more announcing their decision to quit the party, the strength of Congress councillors in the general house is now 30.The Bathinda Municipal Corporation’s term is supposed to continue till February 2026.

Six councillors quit Congress in Punjab’s Bathinda
Man vs. Mouse: Ron DeSantis finds taking on Disney is a dicey business
The Indian Express | 1 day ago | 27-04-2023 | 11:45 am
The Indian Express
1 day ago | 27-04-2023 | 11:45 am

Written by Charles HomansWhen Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida went to war against The Walt Disney Co. over what he labels its “woke” corporate sensibility and its criticism of state policies, Tim Wildmon was cheering from the sidelines.Wildmon, the president of the American Family Association, a right-wing religious organisation, has more experience in this area than most: In 1995, his organisation, which is known for its opposition to LGBTQ rights, rallied a broad coalition of evangelical groups to boycott Disney after it extended family benefits to gay employees.But since then, Wildmon has learned to temper his expectations. After an early wave of international media attention, the boycott receded from the headlines, and by the time Wildmon officially pulled the plug on it a decade later, it had had little discernible impact on Disney’s policies or revenues.“It was very difficult to sustain for more than three or four years,” he said. “People move on. They lose interest. Things change.”And some things stay the same. Almost 20 years later, DeSantis is trying to turn Americans against Disney, one of the most formidable superpowers of American popular culture and commerce. He has also joined the pile-on of another corporate-cultural behemoth, Anheuser-Busch InBev, which incurred a wave of outrage on the right this month over a Bud Light marketing campaign promoting a transgender influencer.“I’d rather be governed by we the people rather than woke companies, so I believe pushback is in order across the board,” the governor said in a recent interview with Benny Johnson, a right-wing media personality.Coming as he prepares to run for president, DeSantis’ moves are testing whether changes in Republican politics and in boardrooms have rewritten the rules for anti-corporate campaigns. US businesses are increasingly engaging in social debates, responding to consumer and employee demand. In the Republican Party, meanwhile, the party’s Trump-era populist rhetorical turn and hardening position on gender politics have combined to make corporate America an appealing battlefield for culture warriors.I signed legislation to end Disney’s self-governing status, placed the area in state receivership, and appointed 5 members to a state control board.Disney no longer has its own government, will live under the same laws as everyone else and pay its debts and fair share of taxes. pic.twitter.com/5JnZmEjSdv— Ron DeSantis (@GovRonDeSantis) February 27, 2023But taking on Mickey Mouse remains a tricky business. As Wildmon and others can attest, brands of the scale and cultural footprint of Disney have emerged from past boycotts without much of a scratch. And corporations that might have been leery of such fights a generation ago are now more likely to see them as inevitable — and in some cases even a source of market advantage.In Florida, Disney has proved a wily political foil for DeSantis. After the company criticised a Republican bill in the state Legislature limiting schools’ instruction on gender and sexuality last year, DeSantis tried to strip Disney of the unusual self-governance arrangement it has enjoyed for decades in the state. But his administration appeared to be outmanoeuvred when Disney’s representatives found a workaround.This month, the governor escalated the dispute by threatening a list of possible punishments. On Wednesday, after a board voted to void agreements that give the company control over expansion at its resort complex, Disney sued in federal court, claiming “a targeted campaign of government retaliation.”Disney’s sloppy and futile attempt to subvert the will of the Legislature and Floridians was uncovered by our state oversight board and their 11th hour agreements will be nullified by the Legislature.Disney’s corporate kingdom is over. pic.twitter.com/GomGyfEDLS— Ron DeSantis (@GovRonDeSantis) April 17, 2023Bryan Griffin, DeSantis’ press secretary, has described the company’s moves as “an attempt to subvert the will of the people of Florida.” Disney, one of the largest employers in the state, has repeatedly described its actions as compliant with state law. Its CEO, Robert Iger, has criticised DeSantis’ actions as “anti-business” and “anti-Florida.”Polls suggest DeSantis’ political success in the debate may hinge on whether he’s viewed as a populist reining in big business or a culture warrior. A Harvard-Harris poll this month found a majority of registered voters nationwide — and a vast majority of Republicans — siding with DeSantis in the showdown. The survey described DeSantis as attempting “to limit Disney’s autonomy” and remove “special tax status.”But another poll, this one conducted this week by Reuters/Ipsos, found less than half of Republicans had a more favourable view of the governor because of his fight with Disney. And majorities of Democrats and Republicans said they were less likely to support a candidate who supported laws intended to punish companies for their positions on cultural issues.The episode has been viewed as a weakness by his prospective rivals in the 2024 presidential primary field, in which polls show DeSantis has slipped. On his Truth Social platform, Donald Trump mocked DeSantis for being “absolutely destroyed by Disney.”Chris Christie, the former governor of New Jersey, questioned whether DeSantis’ heavy-handed use of state power against the company undermined his claims of conservatism.“Where are we headed here now that if you express disagreement in this country, the government is now going to punish you?” Christie said at an event last week.In the campaign against Anheuser-Busch, a more conventional boycott without the political complications of government intervention, the backlash has had a clearer impact. In recent days, amid reports of tumbling sales, the company announced that the marketing executives responsible for the promotional partnership with the influencer, Dylan Mulvaney, were on leave.Disney sued Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis Wednesday, alleging he waged a “targeted campaign of government retaliation” after the company opposed a law critics call “Don’t Say Gay.”https://t.co/ZEyzVacLIY pic.twitter.com/Mi5q2sCqcD— The Associated Press (@AP) April 26, 2023Other companies that have incurred the anger of consumers on the right and left, however, have generally found the ire to be short-lived. Nike was vilified by Trump and others over its 2018 promotional campaign featuring former NFL quarterback Colin Kaepernick, who had faced outrage on the right for kneeling during the national anthem in protest of police shootings of unarmed Black people. Nike’s stock fell 3% after the company released its first Kaepernick ad, but within weeks, it had rebounded to a record high.Nike’s campaign was a signal moment in the shifting politics of corporate America, which has long made common cause with the Republican Party on issues like taxes and regulation but has been drawn into increasingly regular conflict with the party over social issues.In part, this is because corporations have become more socially liberal in their own policies, reflecting broader trends in public opinion on many issues. When the Human Rights Campaign, a prominent LGBTQ-rights organisation, published its first Corporate Equality Index in 2002, only 13 companies received the top score for LGBTQ-friendliness. In 2022, 842 companies did.“I think it’s something that’s important to their employees, to their customers and to their investors,” said Eric Bloem, the organisation’s senior director for programs and corporate advocacy. “It’s all interrelated.”In the 2010s, when newly Republican-controlled state legislatures began aggressively pursuing legislation targeting LGBTQ rights, corporations’ new social politics came into direct conflict with their old Chamber of Commerce allegiances and often outweighed them. Companies like PayPal, Deutsche Bank, Disney and Walmart cancelled expansion plans, threatened boycotts and lobbied political leaders in several states over the new laws.The business community’s shift accelerated after the police murder of George Floyd in 2020, which sent corporations as varied as Citigroup and McDonald’s scrambling to signal their solidarity with the emerging wave of racial justice protests.Brands that have performed outreach to right-leaning Americans have been an exception rather than the rule, and they have been mostly smaller enterprises. But for Republican politicians like DeSantis, the party base’s discontent with the new corporate value-signalling has proved an opportunity. Last year, communications firm Edelman found in its annual Trust Barometer survey that for the first time, a majority of Republican respondents — and more Republicans than Democrats — said they did not trust business.“The Republican Party was all about promoting the virtues of capitalism,” said Vivek Ramaswamy, an entrepreneur and Republican presidential candidate who has centered a criticism of corporate America’s social liberalism in his campaign.As recently as a few years ago, he said, campaigning against big business was an awkward fit for the party. Now, he said, “we can understand what’s happened a little better.”

Man vs. Mouse: Ron DeSantis finds taking on Disney is a dicey business