Thứ Ba, 1 tháng 5, 2012

Wal-Marts Good-Citizen Efforts Face a Test

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Manuel Balce Ceneta/Associated Press

By ERIC LICHTBLAU
Published: April 30, 2012

WASHINGTON — Besides its success in selling goods that range from groceries to televisions, Wal-Mart has also shown a highly developed ability to sell itself.

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Leslie Dach, Wal-Mart's top lobbyist, put the company in a positive light at the White House.

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The country's biggest retailer has adroitly used millions of dollars in campaign contributions, charity drives, lobbying campaigns, and its work for popular causes like childhood nutrition and carbon emissions to build support in Congress and the White House.

It also uses these methods to increase its "favorable" ratings, especially with liberals. And as Wal-Mart's top lobbyist explained to investors in 2010, the company thinks the strategy has worked.

"Across the board, our reputation with elected officials is improved, not only here in the U.S. but around the world," the lobbyist, Leslie Dach, boasted as he ticked off poll numbers that he said demonstrated the company's improving public profile. That popularity, he said, "makes it easier for us to stay out of the public limelight when we don't want to be there."

With controversy building over its role in a Mexican bribery scandal, Wal-Mart's desire to stay out of the limelight will now be put to a test. To help weather the fallout, Wal-Mart will rely on the relationships it has worked assiduously to develop in Washington during the last decade — relationships that its critics say have insulated it from political threats.

For years Wal-Mart had reliable allies in the Republican Party, while it struggled to develop support among Democrats. But in recent years it has joined with the Obama administration on a number of its initiatives, including President Obama's health care plan, environmental safeguards and childhood obesity. At the same time, it has aggressively lobbied the administration and Congress on dozens of policies affecting its business operations, including global trade, taxes, immigration , business regulation and waste disposal standards.

Industry experts say its political priorities could now be jeopardized by accusations first disclosed in The New York Times that Wal-Mart had paid $24 million in bribes to Mexican officials and covered up the payments.

"Reputation is very important to Wal-Mart," said Nelson Lichtenstein, a labor history professor at the University of California, Santa Barbara, who wrote a book on the retail giant. "They put a lot of money into building it. And to the extent that the Mexico situation reinforces a negative narrative out there — that Wal-Mart plays fast and loose with the law and is a big bully — this is a setback."

The Justice Department is investigating the bribery accusations. Two leading House Democrats, Henry A. Waxman of California and Elijah E. Cummings of Maryland, sent letters last week seeking to determine what role Wal-Mart might have played in lobbying efforts by the Chamber of Commerce and the business community to scale back the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act. That federal law bans bribing foreign officials.

But a number of prominent political figures from both parties are standing by the company.

Representative Darrell Issa, the California Republican who leads the House oversight committee, indicated last week he had little interest in investigating the Wal-Mart affair.

Companies like Wal-Mart should not be called before Congress "just to get headlines," he said in one interview.

Blanche Lincoln, the former Democratic senator from Arkansas and a longtime backer of her home state retailer, said in an interview that she thought that Wal-Mart could ride out the negative publicity over the Mexico controversy.

"Because they are big, when things happen it's very visible, but when these things happen, they make a conscious decision to correct what needs to be corrected, and they do it in an amazing and positive way," she said.

Representative Dan Boren, Democrat of Oklahoma, echoed that view in a phone call he made to a reporter at the request of Wal-Mart executives. "Wal-Mart has built up a lot of good will on the Hill," Mr. Boren said. "They've been a great corporate citizen. I'm confident this will be just a blip on the radar."

Mr. Issa, Ms. Lincoln, and Mr. Boren, like many lawmakers both Democratic and Republican who have backed the company, all received contributions over the years from Wal-Mart's political action committee or employees.

In all, Wal-Mart's PAC and employees donated nearly $1.7 million to federal candidates in the 2010 election cycle — more than double the amount a decade earlier, according to data from the Center for Responsive Politics, a nonprofit group in Washington that tracks campaign data.

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