Why Corporate Leaders Became Progressive Activists – National Review
The Organization Man, whom we first met in 1956, is still very much with us. And his eccentric career since that time partly answers a question that mystifies many contemporary conservatives: Given that progressives profess to hate corporations, why are our corporate leaders so progressive? It is easy to understand their taking a self-interested stand against the Trump administration over things such as the H-1B program and visa waivers, which interfere with their access to workers and customers, respectively. But 130 corporate leaders including the CEOs of American Airlines and Bank of America getting together to come down on North Carolina over public-bathroom rules that annoy transgender activists? Together with business leaders who have no presence in North Carolina and nothing to do with the state or its politics?
Is it only cravenness or something more?
In the progressive lexicon, the word corporation is practically a synonym for evil. Corporations, in the progressive view, are so stoned on greed and ripped on ruthlessness that they present an existential threat to democracy as we know it. When the Left flies into a mad rage about . . . whatever, the black-bloc terrorists dont burn down the tax office or the police station: They smash the windows of a Starbucks, never mind CEO Howard Schultzs impeccably lefty credentials.
Weird thing, though: With the exception of a few big shiny targets such as Koch Industries (the nations second-largest privately held concern, behind Cargill) and Walmart (the nations largest private employer), the Lefts corporate enemies list is dominated by relatively modest concerns: Chick-fil-A, which, in spite of its recent growth spurt, is only a fraction of the size of McDonalds or YUM Brands; Hobby Lobby, which is not even numbered among the hundred largest private U.S. companies; Waffle House, a regional purveyor of mediocre grits and a benefactor of Georgia Republicans. Carls Jr. was founded by a daily communicant and Knight of Malta, a man who had some not-very-progressive opinions about gay rights. But even in its new role as part of a larger corporate enterprise (the former CEO of which, Andrew Puzder, has been nominated for secretary of labor), the poor mans answer to In-N-Out is not exactly in a position to inflict ultramontane Catholicism on the world at large, though the idea of a California Classic Double Inquisition with Cheese is not without charm.
Far from being agents of reaction, our corporate giants have for decades been giving progressives a great deal to celebrate. Disney, despite its popular reputation for hidebound wholesomeness, has long been a leader on gay rights, much to the dismay of a certain stripe of conservative. Walmart, one of the Lefts great corporate villains, has barred Confederate-flag merchandise from its stores in a sop to progressive critics, and its much-publicized sustainability agenda is more than sentiment: Among other things, it has invested $100 million in economic-mobility programs and doubled the fuel efficiency of its vehicle fleet over ten years. Individual members of the Walton clan engage in philanthropy of a distinctly progressive bent.
In fact, just going down the list of largest U.S. companies (by market capitalization) and considering each firms public political activism does a great deal to demolish the myth of the conservative corporate agenda. Top ten: 1) Apples CEO, Tim Cook, is an up-and-down-the-line progressive who has been a vociferous critic of religious-liberty laws in Indiana and elsewhere that many like-minded people consider a back door to anti-gay discrimination. 2) When protesters descended on SFO to protest President Donald Trumps executive order on immigration, one of the well-heeled gentlemen leading them was Google founder Sergey Brin, and Google employees were the second-largest corporate donor bloc to President Barack Obamas reelection campaign. 3) Microsoft founder Bill Gates is a generous funder of programs dedicated to what is euphemistically known as family planning. 4) Berkshire Hathaways principal, Warren Buffett, is a close associate of Barack Obamas and an energetic advocate of redistributive tax increases on high-income taxpayers. 5) Amazons Jeff Bezos put up $2.5 million of his own money for a Washington State gay-marriage initiative. 6) Facebooks Mark Zuckerberg has pushed for liberal immigration-reform measures, while Facebook cofounder Dustin Moskovitz pledged $20 million to support Hillary Rodham Clinton and other Democrats in 2016. 7) Exxon, as an oil company, may be something of a hate totem among progressives, but it has spent big billions big on renewables and global social programs. 8) Johnson & Johnsons health-care policy shop is run by Liz Fowler, one of the architects of Obamacare and a former special assistant to President Obama. 9) The two largest recipients of JPMorgan cash in 2016 were Hillary Rodham Clinton and the Democratic National Committee, and the banks billionaire chairman, Jamie Dimon, is a high-profile supporter of Democratic politicians including Barack Obama and reportedly rejected an offer from President Trump to serve as Treasury secretary. 10) Wells Fargo employees followed JPMorgans example and donated $7.36 to Mrs. Clinton for every $1 they gave to Trump, and the recently troubled bank has sponsored events for the Human Rights Campaign, GLAAD, and other gay-rights groups, as well as donated to local Planned Parenthood franchises.
Even the hated Koch brothers are pro-choice, pro-gay, and pro-amnesty.
You may see the occasional Tom Monaghan or Phil Anschutz, but, on balance, U.S. corporate activism is overwhelmingly progressive. Why?
For one thing, conservatives are cheap dates. You do not have to convince the readers of National Review or Republicans in Valparaiso that American business is in general a force for good in the world. But if you are, e.g., Exxon, you might feel the need to convince certain people, young and idealistic and maybe a little stupid in spite of their expensive educations, that you are not so bad after all, and that you are spending mucho shmundo turning algae into biofuel, in the words of one Exxon advertisement, and combating malaria and doing other nice things. All of that is true, and Exxon makes sure people know it. The professional activists may sneer and scoff, but they are not the audience.
Even if it were only or mainly a matter of publicity (and it isnt Shell, among other oil majors, is putting real money into renewables and alternative energy), big companies such as Exxon and Apple would still have a very strong incentive to engage in progressive activism rather than conservative activism.
For one thing, there is a kind of moral asymmetry at work: Conservatives may roll their eyes a little bit at promises to build windmills so efficient that well cease needing coal and oil, but progressives (at least a fair portion of them) believe that using fossil fuels may very well end human civilization. The nations F-150 drivers are not going to organize a march on Chevrons headquarters if it puts a billion bucks into biofuels, but the nations Subaru drivers might very well do so if it doesnt.
The same asymmetry characterizes the so-called social issues. The Left will see to it that Brendan Eich is driven out of his position at Mozilla for donating to an organization opposed to gay marriage, but the Right will not see to it that Tim Cook is driven out of his position for supporting gay marriage. For the Right, the question of gay marriage is an important moral and political disagreement, but for the Left the exclusion of homosexual couples from the legal institution of marriage was something akin to Jim Crow, and support for it isnt erroneous, it is wicked. Even those on the right who proclaim that they regard the question of homosexual relationships as a national moral emergency do not behave as though they really believe it: Remember that boycott of Disney theme parks launched with great fanfare by the American Family Association, Focus on the Family, and the Southern Baptist Convention back in 1996? Nothing happened, because conservative parents are not telling their toddlers that they cannot go to Disney World because the people who run the park are too nice to that funny blonde lady who has the talk show and dances in the aisles with her audience.
The issues that conservatives tend to see as life-and-death issues are actual life-and-death issues, abortion prominent among them. But even among right-leaning corporate types, pro-life social conservatism is a distinctly minority inclination.
And that is significant, because a great deal of corporate activism is CEO-driven rather than shareholder-driven or directly rooted in the business interests of the firm. Like Wall Street bankers, who may not like their tax bills or Dodd-Frank but who tend in the main to be socially liberal Democrats, the CEOs of major U.S. corporations are, among other things, members of a discrete class. The graduates of ten colleges accounted for nearly half of the Fortune 500 CEOs in 2012; one in seven of them went to one school: Harvard. A handful of metros in California, Texas, and New York account for a third of Fortune 1000 headquarters and there are 17 Fortune 1000 companies in one zip code in Houston. Unsurprisingly, people with similar backgrounds, similar experiences, and similar occupations tend to see the world in a similar way. A new breed of chief executive is emerging the CEO activist, wrote Leslie Gaines-Ross, of Weber Shandwick, a global PR giant that advises Microsoft and had the unenviable task of working with Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services on the ACA rollout. A handful of CEOs are standing up and standing out on some of the most polarizing issues of the day, from climate change and gun control, to race relations and same-sex marriage. Hence chief executives joining en masse the great choir of hysteria on the question of toilet law in the Tar Heel State.
Whereas the ancient corporate practice was to decline to take a public position on anything not related to their businesses, contemporary CEOs feel obliged to act as public intellectuals as well as business managers. Many of them are genuine intellectuals: Gates, PepsiCos Indra Nooyi, Goldman Sachss Lloyd Blankfein. And, like Hollywood celebrities, almost all of them are effectively above money.
Some of them are rock-star entrepreneurs. But most of them are variations on the Organization Man, veterans of MBA programs, management consultancies, financial firms,
and 10,000 corporate-strategy meetings. If you have not read it, spare a moment for William H. Whytes Cold War classic. In the 1950s, Whyte, a writer for Fortune, interviewed dozens of important CEOs and found that they mostly rejected the ethos of rugged individualism in favor of a more collectivist view of the world. The capitalists were not much interested in defending the culture of capitalism. What he found was that the psychological and operational mechanics of large corporations were much like those of other large organizations, including government agencies, and that American CEOs believed, as they had believed since at least the time of Frederick Winslow Taylor and his 19th-century cult of scientific management, that expertise deployed through bureaucracy could impose rationality on such unruly social entities as free markets, culture, family, and sexuality. The supplanting of spontaneous order with political discipline is the essence of progressivism, then and now.
It is hardly a new idea. The old robber barons were far from being free-enterprise men: J. P. Morgan and Andrew Carnegie, like many businessmen of their generation, believed strongly in state-directed collusion among firms (theyd have said coordination) to avoid destructive competition. You can draw a straight intellectual line from their thinking to Barack Obamas views about state-directed investments in alternative energy or medical research.
It is not difficult to see the temptations of that approach from the point of view of a Bill Gates or a Warren Buffett: The decisions they have made for themselves have turned out well, so why not empower them, or men like them, to make decisions for other people, too? They may even be nave or arrogant enough to believe that their elevated stations in life have liberated them from self-interest.
Populists of the Trump variety and the Sanders variety (who are not in fact as different as they seem) are not wrong to see these corporate cosmopolitans as members of a separate, distinct, and thriving class with economic and social interests of its own. Those interests overlap only incidentally and occasionally with those of movement conservatives and overlap even less as the new nationalist-populist strain in the Republican party comes to dominate the debate on questions such as trade and immigration. Under attack from both the right and the left, free enterprise and free trade increasingly are ideas without a party. As William H. Whyte discovered back in 1956, the capitalists are not prepared to offer an intellectual defense of capitalism or of classical liberalism. They believe in something else: the managers dream of command and control.
Kevin D. Williamson is National Reviews roving correspondent.
Excerpt from:
Why Corporate Leaders Became Progressive Activists - National Review
- Progressives say theyll vote against warrantless spy power renewal - The Hill - March 20th, 2026 [March 20th, 2026]
- Big spenders have mixed night in Illinois as progressives mostly come up short - Roll Call - March 20th, 2026 [March 20th, 2026]
- Bernie Sanders, progressives to force new votes on blocking arms sales to Israel - Jewish Insider - March 20th, 2026 [March 20th, 2026]
- Both Trump and progressives are foggy on Iran - The Hill - March 20th, 2026 [March 20th, 2026]
- Advertisers shift to conservative creators over progressives under Trump - AOL.com - March 20th, 2026 [March 20th, 2026]
- Jeffries hasn't lost a single Democratic vote in 20 speaker ballots, but a new wave of progressives may be about to end that streak - Attack of the... - March 20th, 2026 [March 20th, 2026]
- Trump-enabling Democrats lost their elections to progressives in North Carolina last night - LGBTQ Nation - March 7th, 2026 [March 7th, 2026]
- Nida Allam Concedes to Valerie Foushee With Razor-Thin Loss for Progressives in Key Midterm Primary - The Intercept - March 7th, 2026 [March 7th, 2026]
- Progressives Are Getting Bad Advice on Iran - National Review - March 4th, 2026 [March 4th, 2026]
- Connecticut Must Reject Progressives Tax-the-Rich Agenda - Americans for Tax Reform - March 4th, 2026 [March 4th, 2026]
- Progressives threaten primaries over Iran vote - breakingthenews.net - March 4th, 2026 [March 4th, 2026]
- Texas Progressives Say Democratic Establishment Is Blowing It In the Rio Grande Valley - The Intercept - March 2nd, 2026 [March 2nd, 2026]
- Washington state progressives strike big business tax break from 'millionaires tax' - KUOW - March 2nd, 2026 [March 2nd, 2026]
- Labour must stop channelling Reform and unite with progressives. Thats the lesson from Gorton and Denton - The Guardian - March 2nd, 2026 [March 2nd, 2026]
- Progressives bet big on anti-Israel sentiment to oust Valerie Foushee in North Carolina - Washington Examiner - March 2nd, 2026 [March 2nd, 2026]
- Why Is the Democratic Party So Afraid of Progressives? - Zeteo | Substack - March 2nd, 2026 [March 2nd, 2026]
- Conservatives, Progressives, LGBTQ+ People, and Jars of Jam - New Ways Ministry - March 2nd, 2026 [March 2nd, 2026]
- Pandering to progressives on Iran will doom Starmer - The Telegraph - March 2nd, 2026 [March 2nd, 2026]
- Article | Most NYC Council progressives call on Hochul to tax the rich - POLITICO Pro - February 27th, 2026 [February 27th, 2026]
- Matt Walshs real history is a flawed challenge to progressives - UnHerd - February 27th, 2026 [February 27th, 2026]
- Reform's Matt Goodwin said the Gorton and Denton by-election saw a coalition of Islamist and woke progressives. Labour came third in the election,... - February 27th, 2026 [February 27th, 2026]
- How Jesse Jackson set the stage for Bernie Sanders and todays progressives - The Conversation - February 24th, 2026 [February 24th, 2026]
- Pauline Hansons populism is a front. But there are lessons for progressives in One Nations surging popularity - The Guardian - February 24th, 2026 [February 24th, 2026]
- Ten Commandments Ruling Underscores That Progressives Need School Choice - Cato Institute - February 24th, 2026 [February 24th, 2026]
- Frank Floor Talk: The progress of progressives - CDC Gaming - February 24th, 2026 [February 24th, 2026]
- Democrats, progressives stage counterprogram to Trump State of the Union - Scripps News - February 24th, 2026 [February 24th, 2026]
- The subspecies of progressives and how theyre mutually reinforcing - Why Evolution Is True - February 24th, 2026 [February 24th, 2026]
- Lessons from the Maharashtra Civic Polls: Why Progressives Need to Urgently Focus on the Booth - The Wire India - February 24th, 2026 [February 24th, 2026]
- Right-Wing Think Tanks Are Building a New Hegemony Europe's Progressives Must Fight Back - Social Europe - February 24th, 2026 [February 24th, 2026]
- Can Vancouver Progressives Unite to Win the Next Election? - The Tyee - February 24th, 2026 [February 24th, 2026]
- For Thailand's popular progressives, winning the vote is only the first hurdle - BBC - February 7th, 2026 [February 7th, 2026]
- Trying to influence progressives in New Jersey, AIPAC may actually help one get elected - The Forward - February 7th, 2026 [February 7th, 2026]
- Here is a political lesson progressives need to learn, and fast: British pubs are crucial | Simon Jenkins - The Guardian - February 7th, 2026 [February 7th, 2026]
- White progressives criticizing Jasmine Crockett's Senate bid need to 'sit their a-- down,' says liberal host - AOL.com - February 7th, 2026 [February 7th, 2026]
- Abolish ICE is the new defund the police for progressives: Charlie Hurt - Fox News - February 7th, 2026 [February 7th, 2026]
- Roland Martin says White progressives criticizing Jasmine Crockett's Senate bid need to 'sit their a-- down' - Yahoo - February 7th, 2026 [February 7th, 2026]
- Ahead Of DHS Funding Battle, Progressives Demand Congress 'Melt ICE' - HuffPost - February 7th, 2026 [February 7th, 2026]
- Abbreviated Pundit Roundup: Progressives are ascendent as Trump sinks in the muck - Daily Kos - February 7th, 2026 [February 7th, 2026]
- Why a T-shirt in a hit movie is trending with Brazilian progressives: Almost every day they sell out - The Guardian - January 30th, 2026 [January 30th, 2026]
- House Progressives Unveil 'Defund the Oligarchs, Fund the People' Resolution - Common Dreams - January 30th, 2026 [January 30th, 2026]
- Elmhurst Progressives Rally For Man Killed By Ice In Minnesota - Patch - January 26th, 2026 [January 26th, 2026]
- Progressives Advance Radical Measure That Could Outlaw Hunting and Fishing in Oregon - thatoregonlife.com - January 26th, 2026 [January 26th, 2026]
- McKee finally endorsed a millionaires tax. Progressives and business groups arent happy. - rhodeislandcurrent.com - January 24th, 2026 [January 24th, 2026]
- Regressive attitude of the Progressives - The Guardian Nigeria News - January 24th, 2026 [January 24th, 2026]
- Trump Likes Some Populist Ideas. Progressives Are Split on Working With Him. - NOTUS News of the United States - January 24th, 2026 [January 24th, 2026]
- Progressives could use the 'power of the purse' to block ICE funding - Fox News - January 22nd, 2026 [January 22nd, 2026]
- Chris Rabb is trying to be the lefts standard-bearer as he runs for Congress. Will progressives rally around him? - inquirer.com - January 22nd, 2026 [January 22nd, 2026]
- Progressives could use the 'power of the purse' to block ICE funding - Yahoo - January 22nd, 2026 [January 22nd, 2026]
- Trump threats and Bukele model on crime back Latin American progressives into corner - tdtnews.com - January 22nd, 2026 [January 22nd, 2026]
- National Progressives Side With Mamdani in House Race Splitting NYC Left - The Intercept - January 16th, 2026 [January 16th, 2026]
- Decosimo wants school board to regress, progressives and data centers and more rants - Chattanooga Times Free Press - January 16th, 2026 [January 16th, 2026]
- Silence of the Sheep: Why Progressives Are Ignoring the Massacre of Iranians - Jewish Journal - January 16th, 2026 [January 16th, 2026]
- As birthrates tumble, some progressives say the left needs to offer ideas and solutions - NPR - January 14th, 2026 [January 14th, 2026]
- Watch live: House progressives rail against Trump immigration agenda, call for DHS reform - The Hill - January 14th, 2026 [January 14th, 2026]
- How progressives can win the battle of ideas - New Statesman - January 14th, 2026 [January 14th, 2026]
- Congressional progressives vow to block DHS funding without reforms - The Guardian - January 14th, 2026 [January 14th, 2026]
- Newsom breaks with progressives over proposed California billionaire tax - Yahoo - January 14th, 2026 [January 14th, 2026]
- Newsom breaks with progressives over proposed California billionaire tax - Straight Arrow News - January 14th, 2026 [January 14th, 2026]
- House Progressives To Oppose Any New DHS Funding Without Reforms - HuffPost - January 14th, 2026 [January 14th, 2026]
- MCGUIRK: Progressives misdiagnose their X problem - Gript - January 14th, 2026 [January 14th, 2026]
- Auroras new progressives rewrite reality | Michael A. Hancock - Denver Gazette - January 11th, 2026 [January 11th, 2026]
- Op-ed: The 2025 federal budget is charting a new course for progressives - thevarsity.ca - January 11th, 2026 [January 11th, 2026]
- Reporter's Notebook: Progressives eye shutdown leverage to rein in ICE, Venezuela operations - Fox News - January 11th, 2026 [January 11th, 2026]
- Quinn Que: To save liberalism, progressives must apologize and abandon their air of moral certainty - Why Evolution Is True - January 11th, 2026 [January 11th, 2026]
- Chile:Leftists and progressives orgs ready for the Festival - plenglish.com - January 11th, 2026 [January 11th, 2026]
- Left abandons Scandinavian model: why progressives are turning away - valleyvanguardonline.com - January 11th, 2026 [January 11th, 2026]
- Gavin Newsom Slammed by Progressives Over Homophobic Grindr Remark Aimed at MAGA Influencer - Inquisitr News - January 8th, 2026 [January 8th, 2026]
- Double Take -- Giese: Trump has flipped script on progressives - TelegraphHerald.com - January 6th, 2026 [January 6th, 2026]
- Diversion from prison is another way progressives keep getting people killed - New York Post - January 6th, 2026 [January 6th, 2026]
- Wisconsin progressives angry with US raid in Venezuela - The Center Square - January 6th, 2026 [January 6th, 2026]
- For more than half a century, the progressives in SF have been rightand the developers wrong - 48 Hills - December 31st, 2025 [December 31st, 2025]
- Houston progressives knocked Whitmire. Were coming back for more. | Opinion - Houston Chronicle - December 31st, 2025 [December 31st, 2025]
- Progressives Urge Passage of Bills to Stop Trump From Launching 'Forever War' in Venezuela - Common Dreams - December 16th, 2025 [December 16th, 2025]
- Burlington Progressives Aim to Retain, Not Gain, Seats in March - Seven Days Vermont - December 16th, 2025 [December 16th, 2025]
- What Should Progressives Do Once We Have a Solid Majority? - Daily Kos - December 16th, 2025 [December 16th, 2025]
- Progressives Forum marks 10 years of APC governance on January 27 - Peoples Gazette Nigeria - December 16th, 2025 [December 16th, 2025]
- Platner courts progressives as Maine Senate race with Mills and Collins tightens - Washington Examiner - December 16th, 2025 [December 16th, 2025]
- Progressives Forum Marks 10 Years Of APC Governance Jan. 27 - News Agency of Nigeria - December 16th, 2025 [December 16th, 2025]
- Christopher Dummitt: Dec. 11 is the day Canada gained autonomy. Progressives want us to forget - National Post - December 12th, 2025 [December 12th, 2025]
- Progressives launch another primary challenge to a House Democrat - Politico - December 12th, 2025 [December 12th, 2025]