Chamber President Tom Donohue Has Vested Interest in Campaign to Limit Consumers?’ Legal Rights as Steward of Two Scandal-Marred Companies
Public Citizen Report Details Donohue?’s Questionable Performance
on Two Corporate Boards
WASHINGTON, D.C. ?– Tom Donohue has a vested interest in the national campaign to limit corporate accountability because the U.S. Chamber of Commerce president sits on the boards of two scandal-ridden corporations, according to a Public Citizen report released today.
Though Donohue has proclaimed the importance of board members serving as watchdogs for the corporations they manage, he sits on the boards of two publicly traded companies ?– Qwest Communications International Inc. and Union Pacific Corp. ?– whose reputations have been marred by serious misdeeds that have prompted the type of civil lawsuits that Donohue is trying to limit. Between them, the two companies have engaged in a monumental deception of investors, violated federal and state regulations on a massive scale, jeopardized public safety, and perverted the American judicial system through alteration and destruction of evidence.
Under Donohue?’s leadership, the Chamber has been one of the most outspoken supporters of pro-business tort law changes. It has supported anti-consumer class action legislation and spent millions of dollars in state races to defeat judicial and attorney general candidates sympathetic to consumer and investor rights. Donohue has called for a massive overhaul of the tort system and reduced regulatory oversight by government agencies ?– the same authorities that have held Qwest and Union Pacific accountable for a long string of corporate misdeeds.
?“Using tens of millions in corporate money, Tom Donohue is systematically trying to disarm the public institutions that hold corporate violators accountable ?– the liability system, the courts, state attorneys general and regulatory agencies,?” said Public Citizen President Joan Claybrook. ?“He sits on boards of two companies that serve as vivid examples of why we need strong law enforcement for crime in the corporate suites.?”
Public Citizen Report Details Donohue?’s Questionable Performance
on Two Corporate Boards
WASHINGTON, D.C. ?– Tom Donohue has a vested interest in the national campaign to limit corporate accountability because the U.S. Chamber of Commerce president sits on the boards of two scandal-ridden corporations, according to a Public Citizen report released today.
Though Donohue has proclaimed the importance of board members serving as watchdogs for the corporations they manage, he sits on the boards of two publicly traded companies ?– Qwest Communications International Inc. and Union Pacific Corp. ?– whose reputations have been marred by serious misdeeds that have prompted the type of civil lawsuits that Donohue is trying to limit. Between them, the two companies have engaged in a monumental deception of investors, violated federal and state regulations on a massive scale, jeopardized public safety, and perverted the American judicial system through alteration and destruction of evidence.
Under Donohue?’s leadership, the Chamber has been one of the most outspoken supporters of pro-business tort law changes. It has supported anti-consumer class action legislation and spent millions of dollars in state races to defeat judicial and attorney general candidates sympathetic to consumer and investor rights. Donohue has called for a massive overhaul of the tort system and reduced regulatory oversight by government agencies ?– the same authorities that have held Qwest and Union Pacific accountable for a long string of corporate misdeeds.
?“Using tens of millions in corporate money, Tom Donohue is systematically trying to disarm the public institutions that hold corporate violators accountable ?– the liability system, the courts, state attorneys general and regulatory agencies,?” said Public Citizen President Joan Claybrook. ?“He sits on boards of two companies that serve as vivid examples of why we need strong law enforcement for crime in the corporate suites.?”