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Conservative
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Wal-Marting Philanthropy
By Bill Berkowitz
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now, almost everyone knows the story of Wal-Mart, the
worlds largest retailer, private employer (it
has more than 5,000 stores; 3,400 in the U.S.), and
the largest company based on revenue, with more than
$280 billion in sales. Wal-Marts discounted prices,
however, come with a heavy price tag. Workers are underpaid
and overworked in sweatshops overseas, while their non-union
counterparts in the U.S. often cannot afford healthcare.
When Wal-Mart comes to town, many small businesses close
down, permanently changing the civil fabric
of local communities. The companys bottom line
is dependent on soaking up hundreds of millions of dollars
in taxpayer subsidies extracted from cash-strapped county
budgets. A May 2004 study by the Washington, DC-based
Good Jobs First entitled Shopping for Subsidies:
How Wal-Mart Uses Taxpayer Money to Finance Its Never
Ending Growth found that the company siphoned
more than one billion dollars in economic development
subsidies from state and local governments across the
country. Wal-Mart has also been the target of a flood
of lawsuits; it is currently the defendant in the largest
sex-discrimination class-action lawsuit ever, a suit
representing more than 1.5 million women.
Wal-Mart, and the Walton family that runs the company
founded by Sam Walton, devotes a significant portion
of its holdings to boosting conservative political candidates
and a conservative social agenda centered on the privatization
of public education.
The National Committee for Responsive Philanthropy (NCRP)
offers some context in its report, The Waltons
and Wal-Mart: SelfInterested Philanthropy: Philanthropic
grant-making and campaign contributions to political
action committees (PACs), as well as to candidates,
increasingly represents the surplus capital of the wealthy,
which they can devote to promoting their sociopolitical
worldview.
The NCRP report notes, Corporations and their
foundations in 2004 contributed $12 billion in cash
and in-kind donations to charities. A lack
of government regulation over the reporting of those
contributions, makes tracking the true amount
of corporate gifts nearly impossible.
It is even more difficult, the NCRP report
maintains, to uncover the true intent behind many
corporate philanthropic projects. While companies
benefit in a number of ways when gifts to non-controversial
charities are acknowledged and publicized, donations
to politically charged campaigns and causes often raise
the hackles of both stockholders and customers. In recent
years little government oversight and a general
lack of transparency have become the spawning
grounds for the misuse and abuse of corporation
philanthropy, as witnessed by scandals involving
Enron and Tyco International, which included questionable
board and executive uses of corporate philanthropy.
The
Walton Family
Bentonville, Arkansas is home
to the Walton family and the Wal-Mart corporate empire.
Andy Serwer reported in an extensive profile in the
November 15, 2004 Fortune magazine that the family
controls about 39 percent [4.3 billion shares]
of Wal-Mart stock, worth some $90 billion, which makes
them by far the richest family in the U.S.
According to the NCRP report, although all family
members have had business ventures and wealth independent
of their inheritance, the bulk of the familys
fortune is managed together by Walton Enterprises.
On an annual basis, the Waltons $90 billion produces
dividends upward of $800 million.
When Sam Walton died in 1992, he left the bulk
of his wealth to his wife, Helen, and their four
children. According to the NCRP, Sam Robson Walton is
the eldest son and has been chair of the Board of Wal-Mart
Stores Inc. John, who recently died, was the activist
in the family, working to fund political campaigns for
school vouchers and charter schools and directing much
of the familys charitable giving. Jim, the
youngest son, is CEO of the Walton familys
financial division, Arvest Holdings, which owns Arvest
Bank
the largest bank in Arkansas. He also
heads Walton Enterprises and owns the local
newspaper in Bentonville. Alice is apparently the only
Walton child that does not directly control any
of the family enterprises.
With strong encouragement from Helen, Sam Walton started
his family foundation with $1,000 in 1987. By the time
Sam Walton died five years later, he left the foundation
$172 million. NWANews.coms Mark Minton pointed
out in November 2004 that, according to the Walton Family
Foundations tax return filed that same month,
it held assets worth $733.9 million at the end
of 2003.
While assorted members of the Walton family have established
their own philanthropic projects, the Walton Family
Foundation and the Wal-Mart Foundations are the flagship
foundations. The Walton Family Foundation already gives
out more than $100 million a yearmuch of it to
opponents of public school educationand it may
receive as much as an additional $20 billion when Helen
dies.
Despite donations to Planned Parenthood and $5 million
for the establishment of Walton Arts Center near the
university campus in Fayetteville, Arkansas, the Walton
family has been a champion of alternatives to public
education. It has supported the establishment of charter
schools and private school choice. It gave a string
of grants totaling nearly $3 million to the national
Knowledge is Power Program, which recruits teachers
to create public college prep charter schools in underserved
communities, Minter reported. The gifts
included donations to 21 such schools around the country.
According to the NCRP report, almost all political
contributions made by Wal-Mart Stores Inc., Political
Action Committee for Responsive Government, and individual
family members, are directed toward Republican candidates
for public office or Republican political committees.
Of $2.1 million given in 2004, $1.6 million went to
the GOP, while less than $500,000 went to Democrats.
Newsweek reported that WMF has consistently ranked
first in total giving based only on cash contributions.
Wal-Mart reported that WMF gave more than $170 million
in 2004, up nearly $60 million from two years earlier.
According to the companys figures, more
than 90 percent of its donations go through its
local stores.
Although
the foundation prohibits the funding of faith-based
organizations whose projects benefit primarily or wholly
their membership or adherents, nevertheless, churches
and other houses of worship receive a large percentage
of
grants, according to the NCRP report.
Schools for Profit
According to its 2003 IRS tax
filing, the Walton Family Foundation (WFF) was the 63rd
largest foundation in terms of assets ($733 plus million)
and 25th largest in terms of giving ($107 million).
The WFF concentrates its giving on three spheres: systematic
reform in education, focusing on K-12; the
northwest region of Arkansas; and the Delta
region of Arkansas and Mississippi. The WFF also
concentrates on funding charter school initiatives,
Educational Options Scholarship Initiatives, school
improvement, and Arkansas education. Before his death,
John Walton was one of the nations leading
private individual funders of charter schools and voucher
initiatives.
The NCRP, looking into the WFFs penchant for spearheading
the privatization movement, asks: Why is the richest
family in the world so committed to education and specifically
to school choice, when they themselves mostly attended
public school to apparently good effect?
Some critics argue that it is the beginning of
the Wal-Martization of education, and a
move to forprofit schooling, from which the family could
potentially financially benefit. John Walton owned 240,000
shares of Tesseract Group Inc. (formerly known as Education
Alternatives Inc.), which is a forprofit company that
develops/manages charter and private school as well
as public schools.
The WFF provides more than $1 million to each of the
following socalled school reform/choice groups: the
American Education Reform Council, the Center for Education
Reform, Childrens Scholarship Fund, Colorado League
of Charter Schools, and the Florida School Choice Fund.
The Childrens Educational Opportunity Foundation
of America (also known as Childrens First America)
received $10.3 million in 2003 and $8.3 million in 2002.
The WFF has also supported the Washington, DC-based
Black Alliance for Education Options (BAEO), an African
Americanheaded group that works to advertise and
market the school voucher movement to African-American
families (www.baeo.org). In October 2002 BAEO
received a $600,000 grant from the Bush administration.
We want to change the conversation about parental
choice by positively influencing individuals who are
resisting parental choice options and get them to reconsider
their outlook, Undersecretary of Education Gene
Hickok said when he announced the grant. The Black
Commentator characterized the BAEO as the
school vouchers propaganda outfit created by the far-right
[Harry and Lynde] Bradley Foundation.
In addition to its support for the school reform
movement, the WFF funds pro-voucher think tanks
like the Goldwater Institute and the Manhattan Institute
for Policy Research. In a short piece, titled
John Walton and the Walton Family Foundation,
People for the American Way point out, On the
legislative front, John Walton personally contributed
$2 million to the failed 2000 Michigan voucher initiative
as well as $250,000 to Californias Prop 174 in
1993, another unsuccessful voucher initiative. Walton
also bankrolled the California effort through his American
Education Reform Foundation, as well as an unsuccessful
1997 voucher campaign in Minnesota.
The National Committee for Responsive Philanthropy concludes
its report by pointing out that, Wal-Mart and
the Walton family have only recently begun to translate
their vast wealth into political power. While
Sam Walton expressed little interest in national politics,
his progeny have moved in that direction.
Bill
Berkowitz is a freelance writer covering conservative
issues and policies.
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