Consumer Read · The Receipts · May 27, 2026
The CBC Just Called Corporate America Back to Its Democracy Pledges.
More than $56 billion tracked in announced corporate investment landing in 8 states actively dismantling Black voting power.
"Silence in this moment is not neutrality — it is complicity."
— Chairwoman Yvette D. Clarke, Congressional Black Caucus · May 26, 2026
On May 26, Congressional Black Caucus Chairwoman Yvette D. Clarke called on Corporate America to publicly reaffirm voting-rights commitments that the Caucus says more than 200 companies made in the wake of 2020 — corporate pledges to defend democracy, equal access to the ballot box, and Black political representation. The call landed one day after the South Carolina Senate blocked a map that would have eliminated the state's only majority-Black district — and inside a six-week window when the Supreme Court weakened federal challenges to racial gerrymandering, Georgia called a special session to redraw its congressional maps before 2028, Alabama's redrawn map was reinstated, and the NAACP named eight states actively dismantling Black voting power. During that same window, Corporate America has been making major investments in those eight states.
The receipts that follow are pulled from Index // MRKT, the Black Dollar Index intelligence platform that tracks corporate equity and Black economic life through a daily public record, as well as the Black Dollar Initiative, BDI's nonprofit research hub.
The CBC's Four Asks
Chairwoman Clarke's call is not a press statement asking corporations to "do better." It is a specific set of measurable actions, directed at the more than 200 corporations the Caucus says publicly committed — after George Floyd's murder by Minneapolis police officers in 2020 — to defend democracy, equal access to the ballot box, and Black political representation. The CBC is asking each of those corporations to do the following:
- Issue a public statement reaffirming the company's commitment to voting rights and equal representation.
- Publish a political-spending report disclosing donations and contributions tied to state legislators and policymakers active in voting-rights legislation.
- Directly engage with the Congressional Black Caucus on the company's current voting-rights posture.
- Participate in a national convening the CBC will host on the future of Black political representation.
The CBC's framing is direct: silence in the wake of the Supreme Court's Louisiana v. Callais ruling — five years after those public voting-rights pledges were made — does not register as neutrality. It registers as a position.
What Has Happened to the Maps
- Apr 29 Supreme Court ruling in Louisiana v. Callais weakens challenges to racial gerrymandering under the Voting Rights Act. The decision restricts the legal tools voters have used to challenge maps that dilute Black voting power. BDI-SIG-2026-1635
- May 1 Georgia Governor Brian Kemp declines to redraw the state's electoral maps for 2026, citing the Callais ruling and the May 19 primary. Black voters in Georgia will go to the polls in 2026 under the existing lines. BDI-SIG-2026-1380
- May 11 The Supreme Court reinstates Alabama's congressional map, overriding a lower-court order that had blocked it under the Voting Rights Act for diluting the Black vote. BDI-SIG-2026-8848
- May 13 Georgia Governor Kemp signs a proclamation convening a special session of the General Assembly for June 17 to redraw the state's electoral maps before the 2028 election cycle. Kemp's words: "It's clear that Callais requires Georgia to adopt new electoral maps before the 2028 election cycle." BDI-SIG-2026-7324
- May 19 The NAACP names eight states — Tennessee, Louisiana, Alabama, Florida, Mississippi, South Carolina, Texas, and Georgia — and calls on Black athletes, families, and fans to withhold support from public schools in those states. NAACP President Derrick Johnson: "It is a sprint to erase Black political power." BDI-SIG-2026-5084
- May 26 The South Carolina Senate blocks a map that would have eliminated the state's only majority-Black district. The lone state-level reversal in the data. BDI-SIG-2026-4560
- May 26 The Congressional Black Caucus calls on Corporate America to defend Black voting power and reaffirm prior pledges. BDI-SIG-2026-2275
Where the Capital Has Landed in 2026
While the maps were being redrawn, Index // MRKT tracked the following corporate investment announcements landing in the eight states.
Mississippi
$25 billion — largest single investment in state history
- Amazon announced a $25 billion investment in Mississippi — the largest in state history. BDI-SIG-2026-5927
Alabama
$14.6 billion · 9,000 jobs — state record year
- Alabama Department of Commerce announced $14.6B in investment and 9,000 jobs across 2025 — the state's largest economic-development year on record. BDI-SIG-2026-4593
Tennessee
$6.7 billion in capital + xAI's Memphis facility
- Korea Zinc · $6.6B investment, announced under Tennessee's "Experience High Volume" brand. BDI-SIG-2026-4056
- Starbucks · $100M expansion in Nashville, 2,000 jobs. BDI-SIG-2026-4275 · BDI-SIG-2026-9771
- xAI · operating 27 gas turbines without an air permit at its South Memphis data center; NAACP filed federal suit. BDI-SIG-2026-5916
Texas
A confirmed legal-home relocation and driverless freight
- ExxonMobil · shareholders approved moving the company's legal home from New Jersey to Texas on May 28 — the state houses 75% of its U.S. employees. Proxy advisers Glass Lewis and ISS warned the move makes it harder for shareholders to sue. BDI-SIG-2026-8722
- Aurora Innovation · launched driverless freight operations for McLane in Texas. BDI-SIG-2026-7381
Georgia
Headquarters move + new distribution capacity
- Yamaha Motor Corp. · relocated its U.S. headquarters from California to Georgia. BDI-SIG-2026-2548
- Hasbro · opened a new distribution center in Midway, Georgia. BDI-SIG-2026-3541
Louisiana
$10.6 billion landing in the state Callais came from
- Meta · secured a $3.3B sales-tax exemption for a $10B AI data center projected to consume up to 20% of Louisiana's electricity. 300–500 permanent jobs. BDI-SIG-2026-2867
- Louisiana Economic Development · sued over $600M in industrial incentives approved without public notice, on land documented as enslaved-people burial grounds. BDI-SIG-2026-7132
Texas is also drawing corporate legal homes, not just capital. ExxonMobil's shareholder-approved move follows Tesla and SpaceX in re-domiciling to the state — a concentration of corporate legal accountability inside one of the eight named states, under a Business Court designed to be more favorable to companies than to the shareholders and communities that might sue them.
Florida and South Carolina are inside the eight named states but did not register a major new corporate investment announcement in the Index // MRKT signal window. Florida remains a permanent presence state for several of the largest U.S. consumer-facing companies, listed below.
The Brands BDI Tracks Across This Footprint
The CBC's call lands on a defined corporate footprint. Twelve brands BDI tracks are either headquartered in one of the eight named states or are making major recent investments inside them. Among those twelve, three are also among the largest 2026 capital deployments into the eight states — Amazon (Mississippi, $25B), Starbucks (Tennessee, $100M), and Hasbro (Georgia distribution). The matrix below also flags which of these brands publicly signed the Business for Voting Rights letter to Congress on July 14, 2021 — the most prominent corporate voting-rights pledge of the post-2020 era.
| Brand | HQ | Industry | Workforce Black % | Executives Black % | Most Recent Report |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| FedEx | Memphis, TN | Shipping | 32.3% | 9.9% | FY2024 |
| Amazon VR Pledger '21 | Seattle, WA | E-commerce & Retail | 26.3% | 5.9% | 2024 |
| Coca-Cola | Atlanta, GA | Beverages | 22.0% | 8.6% | 2022 |
| American Airlines | Fort Worth, TX | Airlines | 19.9% | 7.7% | 2024 |
| Home Depot | Atlanta, GA | Home Improvement | 18.4% | 5.2% | FY2024 |
| Bloomin' Brands | Tampa, FL | Casual Dining | 17.0% | — | 2024 |
| Brinker International | Dallas, TX | Casual Dining | 14.9% | 3.7% | FY2024 |
| Starbucks VR Pledger '21 | Seattle, WA | Coffee & QSR | 8.0% | — | — |
| Hasbro | Pawtucket, RI | Toys & Gaming | 3.0% | — | 2024 |
| Dell Technologies VR Pledger '21 | Round Rock, TX | Consumer Electronics | — | — | FY2024 |
| RBI (Burger King · Popeyes · Tim Hortons) | Miami, FL | Fast Food | — | — | 2024 |
| Chick-fil-A | Atlanta, GA | Fast Food | — | — | 2024 |
Data from Index // MRKT's analysis of each company's most recent publicly available equity disclosure. "—" indicates the company has not published the metric. The VR Pledger '21 badge marks signatories of the July 14, 2021 Business for Voting Rights letter to Congress (businessforvotingrights.com). Three Atlanta brands — Coca-Cola, Home Depot, and Chick-fil-A — are headquartered in Georgia, where the governor has called a June 17 special session to redraw electoral maps before 2028. Meta (as Facebook) also signed the 2021 BVR letter; Meta is not in this matrix but is the largest 2026 corporate investment in Louisiana ($10B Project Hyperion).
Other BVR Signers in the 8-State Footprint
Beyond the brands in BDI's full equity matrix above, the Business for Voting Rights signatory list includes additional corporations with consequential presence in the eight named states. They are separated here because BDI does not currently track the full equity record for the HQ additions — and because the operational-footprint cross-reference is broader research the deeper investigation can complete on commission.
BVR Signers Headquartered in the 8 States
- Tesla · HQ Austin, Texas. Relocated from Palo Alto, California in late 2021 — the move was announced on October 7, 2021, three months after Tesla signed the July 14, 2021 Business for Voting Rights letter to Congress. BDI does not currently have a full Tesla equity scorecard.
- Greenlight Financial Technology · HQ Atlanta, Georgia. Atlanta-based fintech. BDI does not currently have a full Greenlight equity scorecard.
BVR Signers With Major Operations in the 8 States
The following BVR signers are not headquartered in the eight states but do have substantial operational, retail, or distribution presence inside them, with BDI equity records already on file:
- Apple, Google, Microsoft, HP · major Texas operations and data centers; Google additionally with a substantial Atlanta presence.
- Target, Best Buy · national consumer-retail footprint covering all eight states.
- PepsiCo · Atlanta-area bottling and distribution operations, plus broader southern-state footprint.
A full state-by-state cross-reference of operational presence, political spending, and supplier networks for the broader BVR signatory list is the kind of mapping the deeper investigation can complete on commission. See below.
The Say-Do Gap: Scorecard vs. Signals
Index // MRKT carries two streams of data on every brand in the matrix above: the corporate equity scorecard — built from each company's most recent published disclosure — and the daily signal record — built from news, court filings, regulatory actions, and public statements that follow. The scorecard is what each company says about its own track record with Black stakeholders. The signal record is what the company actually does, day to day, in public. Below, the two streams compared for the brands with the most consequential 2026 activity.
Coca-Cola
Atlanta, Georgia · Beverages · Equity report on record: 2022
What the Scorecard Says
Coca-Cola's most recent public equity disclosure is from 2022. That report carries a 22.0% U.S. Black workforce share (up 1.1 percentage points from 20.9% in 2021) and 8.6% Black senior leadership. Named commitments include $3 million to scholarship funds, $1 million to the Atlanta Police Foundation, $500,000 to the National Center for Civil and Human Rights, and expanded partnerships with HBCUs and the National Black MBA Association. The 2022 disclosure includes multi-year commitments, third-party verification, and a public EEO-1 filing.
What the Signals Show
In 2026, Index // MRKT has logged one Coca-Cola signal: an R17.6 billion investment in South Africa through 2030, announced March 31. The CBC's letter went public May 26 — Index // MRKT will track Coca-Cola's response as it lands.
The Read
Coca-Cola was one of the most visible corporate voices in the post-2020 voting-rights wave — CEO James Quincey publicly opposed Georgia's SB 202 in 2021. The 2022 scorecard is substantive. The four-year gap since, paired with a 2026 capital deployment in a different country, is the gap that matters now.
Amazon
Seattle, Washington · E-commerce & Retail · Equity report on record: 2024
What the Scorecard Says
Amazon publicly signed the Business for Voting Rights letter to Congress on July 14, 2021, joining the post-2020 corporate voting-rights pledge wave. Amazon's 2024 disclosure reports a 26.3% U.S. Black workforce share and 5.9% Black executive share. Amazon attributes $10 billion in spending to Black communities — primarily data-center development siting and related infrastructure.
What the Signals Show
In 2026, Index // MRKT logged eleven Amazon signals. The largest: a $25 billion investment in Mississippi (4/9) — the largest single investment in state history, landing in the smallest of the eight NAACP-named states. Separately, Amazon reportedly forwent $127 billion in tariff refunds amid Trump-administration political pressure (4/24). Amazon also signed an exclusive media deal with Oprah Winfrey (4/27).
The Read
In 2026, Amazon's single largest capital deployment landed in a state actively dismantling Black voting power. The same year, Amazon reportedly forwent $127 billion in tariff refunds under Trump-administration pressure. Both moves came after Amazon's 2021 BVR signature.
American Airlines
Fort Worth, Texas · Airlines · Equity report on record: 2024
What the Scorecard Says
A 19.9% U.S. Black workforce and 7.7% Black executive share. Public EEO-1 filing, multi-year commitments, and third-party verification all on the record. The 2024 disclosure documents a partnership with the Charlotte community's noise roundtable to secure Charlotte City Council approval of an updated Part 150 Noise Compatibility Study at Charlotte Douglas International Airport — addressing noise dispersion in surrounding Black neighborhoods.
What the Signals Show
In 2026, the largest American Airlines signal in BDI's record is the Starlink in-flight Wi-Fi deal on 500+ aircraft (5/26). Starlink is owned by SpaceX, which is on the public record lobbying the South African government to dismantle the country's 30% Black-ownership rule for telecom. Domestically, the same controlling shareholder also owns xAI — the AI company named in an NAACP federal suit that alleges its unpermitted Memphis data center emits 1,700 tons of smog-forming NOx annually into Black neighborhoods in Tennessee, one of the eight states named in the NAACP voting-rights campaign.
The Read
While the 2024 disclosure shows American Airlines advocating with the Charlotte community to limit airport noise pollution in Black neighborhoods, the 2026 Starlink partnership routes every American Airlines passenger's in-flight data through an ownership network on the public record lobbying against Black-ownership rules abroad and named in the NAACP suit over pollution into Black neighborhoods in Memphis.
Starbucks
Seattle, Washington · Coffee & QSR · Limited public equity disclosure on record
What the Scorecard Says
Starbucks publicly signed the Business for Voting Rights letter to Congress on July 14, 2021, joining the post-2020 corporate voting-rights pledge wave. Public equity disclosure beyond that is limited: a reported 8.0% U.S. Black workforce share is on record. EEO-1 data, multi-year equity commitments, and third-party verification are not currently part of Starbucks's public reporting.
What the Signals Show
In 2026, Index // MRKT has logged four Starbucks signals. The two largest are a $100 million Nashville office expansion with 2,000 jobs (4/22) and a third round of U.S. corporate layoffs under CEO Brian Niccol (5/15).
The Read
Starbucks is on the CBC's directly addressed list as a documented 2021 voting-rights pledger. Major capital is landing in Tennessee — one of the eight named states — while broader U.S. corporate cuts continue under CEO Brian Niccol. The CBC's letter is now on the table.
Hasbro
Pawtucket, Rhode Island · Toys & Gaming · Equity report on record: 2024
What the Scorecard Says
A 3% reported U.S. Black workforce share — the lowest in the matrix, and the same share Hasbro has reported across 2022, 2023, and 2024. Voluntary turnover for Black employees rose from 7% in 2023 to 12% in 2024. Black promotion rates increased from 3% to 4% over the same window.
What the Signals Show
In 2026, Hasbro's largest signal is the opening of a new distribution center in Midway, Georgia (3/19) — expansion into the state whose governor has now called a June 17 special session to redraw electoral maps before 2028.
The Read
A low-engagement record pairs with capital flowing into a disenfranchising state. This is the cleanest alignment in the matrix — what the company says about its track record with Black stakeholders and what its current capital deployment shows.
Bottom Line
The Congressional Black Caucus made a public, specific demand on May 26, with four named actions. The voting maps that prompted the call have moved — or have been scheduled to move — in Louisiana, Alabama, Georgia, and South Carolina, with the NAACP naming eight states in the broader pattern. The capital landed in those same states totals more than $56 billion in 2026 alone. The corporations headquartered there have a public-record posture documented in Index // MRKT. The CBC will hold a national convening. The receipts above are what was on the public record on the day the call went out. Index // MRKT will track each corporation's response as it lands.
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Index // MRKT Signals Cited
- BDI-SIG-2026-2275 — CBC Demands Corporate America Defend Black Voting Power, Reaffirm Pledges (5/26)
- BDI-SIG-2026-5084 — NAACP names 8 states; $100M+ athletic-revenue withholding campaign (5/19)
- BDI-SIG-2026-1635 — Supreme Court ruling in Louisiana v. Callais (4/29)
- BDI-SIG-2026-1380 — Georgia governor declines to redraw electoral maps for 2026 (5/1)
- BDI-SIG-2026-8848 — Supreme Court reinstates Alabama map (5/11)
- BDI-SIG-2026-7324 — Georgia convenes June 17 special session to redraw maps before 2028 (5/13)
- BDI-SIG-2026-4560 — South Carolina Senate blocks majority-Black-district elimination (5/26)
- BDI-SIG-2026-5927 — Amazon's $25B Mississippi investment (4/9)
- BDI-SIG-2026-4593 — Alabama $14.6B / 9,000 jobs record year (5/14)
- BDI-SIG-2026-4056 — Tennessee's $6.6B Korea Zinc investment (4/15)
- BDI-SIG-2026-4275 — Starbucks $100M Nashville expansion (4/22)
- BDI-SIG-2026-9771 — Starbucks Nashville corporate operations office (3/3)
- BDI-SIG-2026-5916 — NAACP sues xAI over South Memphis data-center pollution (4/14)
- BDI-SIG-2026-2867 — Meta secures $3.3B tax break for $10B Louisiana AI data center (5/10)
- BDI-SIG-2026-8722 — ExxonMobil shareholders approve legal-home move to Texas; 75% of U.S. employees there (5/28)
- BDI-SIG-2026-7381 — Aurora Innovation launches driverless McLane freight in Texas (5/6)
- BDI-SIG-2026-2548 — Yamaha Motor Corp. moves U.S. HQ to Georgia (3/10)
- BDI-SIG-2026-3541 — Hasbro opens new distribution center in Midway, Georgia (3/19)
- BDI-SIG-2026-7132 — Louisiana $600M industrial incentives lawsuit (4/2)
External public record: Business for Voting Rights — Letter to Congress, July 14, 2021 — corporate signatory list referenced in the matrix and Say-Do cards above.