Executives at companies like Nike, Anheuser-Busch and Kate Spade, whose brand endorsements have turned controversial trans influencer Dylan Mulvaney into todays woke It girl, arent just virtue signaling.
Theyre handing out lucrative deals to what were once considered fringe celebrities because they have to or risk failing an all-important social credit score that could make or break their businesses.
At stake is their Corporate Equality Index or CEI score, which is overseen by the Human Rights Campaign, the largest LGBTQ+ political lobbying group in the world.
HRC, which has received millions from George Soros Open Society Foundation among others, issues report cards for Americas biggest corporations via the CEI: awarding or subtracting points for how well companies adhere to what HRC calls its rating criteria.
Businesses that attain the maximum 100 total points earn the coveted title Best Place To Work For LGBTQ Equality. Fifteen of the top 20 Fortune-ranked companies received 100% ratings last year, according to HRC data.
More than 840 US companies racked up high CEI scores, according to the latest report.
The HRC, which was formed in 1980 and started the CEI in 2002, is led by Kelley Robinson who was named as president in 2022 and worked as a political organizer for Barack Obamas 2008 presidential campaign.
The HRC lists five major rating criteria, each with its own lengthy subsets, for companies to gain or lose CEI points.
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