The Mad Hatter wrote:By not expressing it to their employees at all.
? So, they can express their opinion to their employees by not expressing their opinions to their employees. LOL
If employers were prohibited from expressing opinions to their employees, then it would be difficult to manage their business.
The Mad Hatter wrote:
And no, the issue is not 'what they did do'.
It is what they are trying to do, it is the motivations for it and it is the implications.
They are trying to get their employees to vote for candidates they prefer. Can't get more American than that.
The Mad Hatter wrote:
McD's has a well documented history of punishing employees who went against the Company's political interests as much as they could. They could easily find out who an employee voted for because people tend to talk about that stuff, it was how they did it before.
Examples?
The Mad Hatter wrote:
QUite frankly it can fuck off. It has no right to campaign to its employees.
It doesn't? Why not?
The Mad Hatter wrote:
A corporation is not an individual, a corporation has no right to free speech.
Yes, it does. And, that's coming from liberal and conservative members of the Supreme Court.
If a corporation has no right of free speech, then PETA, the American Atheists, Inc., and the American Cancer Society, Inc., and the New York Times, Inc. have no right of free speech. A corporation is a group of people - if individuals have free speech, then so do groups of individuals. Constitutional rights apply to corporations as well as individuals. For example, just because a business is incorporated doesn't mean that there is no right to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures, or that warrants can issue as to corporations with less than probable cause. Corporations are not subject to having their security guards stripped of their guns without due process of law. Corporations can't be twice put in jeopardy for the same offense, in a criminal prosecution. Corporations are entitled to due process of law.
In 1976, the Supreme Court held that the First Amendment protected commercial speech by corporations. The Court ruled in Virginia State Board of Pharmacy that a Virginia regulation banning advertising of pharmaceutical prices was unconstitutional. In 1978, the Court held that corporations had political speech rights as well. In First National Bank, the court upheld the right of Massachusetts corporations to make campaign contributions to defeat a political referendum that would have enacted a progressive income tax. The Supreme Court extended this line of cases in 1986, when it ruled that corporations have "negative" speech rights not to be associated with the speech of others or to be forced to speak.
It has never been part of American constitutional law that only individuals have first amendment rights.