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The U.S. Chamber in the news - August 14

Report: Corporate Interests ‘Tilt’ Courts, Reforms Needed

To reverse the rising influence of a flood of corporate interest spending on elected courts, reforms are critically needed to make the justice system work for all, not just for well-heeled special interests, a new Center for American Progress report said. More...

The U.S. Chamber in the news - August 10

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce appears in the following stories in today's news: More...

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It can be hard to get a big corporation to go on record about anything – much less something controversial.

That’s why I was pleasantly surprised by the answer I got at Google’s annual shareholder meeting when I asked cofounder Larry Page why the company is a member of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, an organization that has publicly opposed many of Google’s positions and interests.

After receiving applause for my question, Google’s head lawyer David Drummond – who was helping Page to answer questions – responded that the company’s membership in the U.S. Chamber is something senior leadership debates a lot. He added that while there are some things that the U.S. Chamber is good for, there is a lot of stuff it does that Google doesn’t agree with.

He concluded by saying that, “while we are members for now, it’s something that we do review.”

You can Google anything right?

Well, try going to the search engine and entering “Google’s political spending.”

You’ll get something like this: