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On the Wal-Mart Money Trail
The Nation
Liza Featherstone
November 2, 2005
With a combined fortune of more than $90 billion, the Waltons--the immediate
heirs of Wal-Mart founder Sam Walton--are the richest family in the world. Five
of the country's ten richest individuals are members of Sam's immediate family:
his wife, Helen, and their three surviving children--Rob, Jim and Alice--as
well as his late son John's widow, Christy (John Walton died in June when his
private plane crashed). Until recently, however, they gave away little of their
fortune. As Sam Walton explained in his 1992 autobiography, Made in America, he
didn't believe in giving "any undeserving stranger a free ride." Nor did he
believe in being generous with company profits. "We feel very strongly," he
wrote, "that Wal-Mart really is not, and should not be, in the charity
business." Money that Wal-Mart donated to charity, he reasoned, would only come
out of the pockets of "either our shareholders or our customers." (He didn't
mention workers, perhaps a tacit acknowledgment that picking their pockets was
just business as usual.) As for politics, Sam couldn't stand the stuff. At a
1988 Mother's Day "toast and roast" honoring Helen Walton, then-Senator Dale
Bumpers of Arkansas quipped that waiting for big campaign contributions from
the Waltons was like "leaving landing lights on for Amelia Earhart."
All that has changed. Since Sam died in 1992, both the Bentonville,
Arkansas-based company and the family have dramatically escalated their
charitable giving, becoming far more influential in the worlds of philanthropy
and politics. It is hardly a coincidence that this transformation occurred
after Wal-Mart became the nation's largest private employer and a flytrap for
much-deserved criticism. The company is battling numerous employee rights
lawsuits in court, the biggest of these being Betty Dukes v. Wal-Mart Stores, a
sex-discrimination class action representing 1.6 million women. Communities
around the nation, charging that the company is a stingy low-wage employer with
an arrogant disregard for local and national laws, are battling to keep
Wal-Mart from opening or expanding stores. Several labor unions have made
fighting Wal-Mart a top priority. This year two major national organizations,
Wal-Mart Watch and Wake Up Wal-Mart, formed to lead a citizens' movement to
pressure the company to change its ways.
The National Committee for Responsive Philanthropy (NCRP), a watchdog group,
released a report in September, The Waltons and Wal-Mart: Self-Interested
Philanthropy, detailing the recent increase in Wal-Mart and Walton philanthropy
and noting its likely relationship to the company's image problems. Indeed, the
increase has been staggering. The Walton Family Foundation (WFF) gave away
$106.9 million in 2003--the most recent year for which data are
available--twice as much as in 2000. Wal-Mart's company PAC, now the
third-largest corporate PAC and the second-largest corporate donor to the GOP,
gave away $2.1 million in 2004, compared with just $100,000 in 1994. The Walton
family, too, has greatly increased its political giving; in 2004, for example,
Alice donated $2.6 million to the influential Republican PAC Progress for
America, which supported the sleazy Swift Boat Veterans for Truth and gave Bush
a critical push in the election's final months. Since 1999 the Wal-Mart
Foundation (WMF)--a company-controlled entity with no direct connection to the
WFF--has tripled its giving and by the end of this year will have doled out
more than $200 million in cash and merchandise, according to spokeswoman
Melissa O'Brien.
The company also donated $20 million in cash and merchandise to the
Hurricane Katrina relief effort, garnering extensive--and partially
justified--praise. To antigovernment zealots like New York Times columnist John
Tierney and the wing nuts running the Wall Street Journal editorial page,
Wal-Mart's impressive response to the hurricane showed that the private sector
is simply more effective than the government. It is true that when you starve
government by draining its resources and electing officials who don't believe
in it, nothing seems to work. But Wal-Mart played a major role in that
eviscerating process. Much of Wal-Mart's philanthropy (as well as that of the
Walton family) has been directed toward promoting anti-government politics,
whether by lobbying against high taxes for the rich or contributing to
Republican candidates, conservative think tanks and efforts to privatize
education.
Jeff Krehely, who co-wrote the NCRP report, says that for his organization,
such a sharp increase in giving, coupled with the company's obvious desire to
spin itself as a better corporate citizen, "raises red flags. We wonder, What's
the agenda here? What's happening?" The WMF's Melissa O'Brien told The Nation
that criticisms of the company come from "special-interest groups" and do not
influence its giving. She also told the New York Sun that the NCRP report was
funded by Target, a charge Krehely calls "ludicrous." (Dayton Hudson, Target's
former parent company, contributed to the NCRP in the 1990s. In 2000 the
company reorganized as the Target Corporation and hasn't contributed to the
watchdog group since.)
Each Walton heir has philanthropic projects of his or her own--Alice, for
example, is building a world-class art museum in northwest Arkansas--but the
family fortune should be considered as one because most of the money is managed
together. The giving is also largely administered together, through the Walton
Family Foundation, as well as through close communication among its family
members. (At least twice a year, the family meets to talk about how to spend
its money.) The Waltons own about 40 percent of Wal-Mart's stock, making
Wal-Mart essentially a family business--highly unusual for a large
multinational company. (Both the Wal-Mart Family Foundation and Walton
Enterprises--the company that represents the Walton family's
interests--declined to cooperate with this article, or to make any of the
notoriously press-shy Waltons available for interviews.)
Philanthropy obscures the often unseemly process by which the money was
made--and for Wal-Mart that's at least part of the point. Stephen Copley, a
United Methodist Church pastor who serves on the board of the Arkansas Single
Parents Scholarship Fund, a Springdale, Arkansas, charity that has benefited
from Walton dollars, says that the program has "an incredible success rate. One
lady even got a PhD. [The Walton money] does a tremendous amount of good."
However, he adds, "it's great to help single parents go to school, but those
same single parents might be working for Wal-Mart, and they can't afford health
insurance." Copley, also head of the Arkansas Interfaith Committee for Worker
Justice, is troubled that in his home state, Walton and Wal-Mart generosity
"gets great media...they look so good even though in reality their business
practices are very bad."
The Wal-Mart Foundation gives a staggering number of gifts, apparently in
order to buy goodwill in as many communities as possible, rather than, as
Krehely points out, "giving to sustain organizations." The WMF's 2003 IRS 990
form is 2,239 pages long, far longer than that of the Ford Foundation, which
has billions more in assets. That's because most WMF gifts are tiny: thousands
or even hundreds of dollars to churches and Lions clubs and Boys and Girls
clubs, $500 to the YMCA of Nashville and Middle Tennessee and to the Tulip
Trace (Indiana) Girl Scouts Council and so on. Communities where Wal-Mart faced
a particular battle over opening a new store--Inglewood, California, or New
York City--enjoyed especially generous largesse. Like the flowers and other
tokens of courtship from a suitor who later becomes a wife-beater, such gifts
are often followed by demands for public subsidies and tax breaks. In this way
Wal-Mart is repeating the strategy that has served it so well in Arkansas,
where Wal-Mart and the Waltons' charitable gifts are many and company critics
are relatively few. Says Lindsay Brown, president of the Central Arkansas Labor
Council, "It's a hell of a plan, and it works."
We are supposed to applaud philanthropy--the very word connotes altruism and
"giving back"--but Walton and Wal-Mart giving serves as a reminder that
philanthropy provides an alternative to taxation, a way for rich people and
corporations to decide what to do with their extra money, as opposed to letting
the rest of us decide through our elected governments. Since charitable
donations are a tax write-off, as Krehely points out, "they are supposed to
benefit the public good." He thinks it is reasonable to ask whether a
family's--or a company's--philanthropy serves the common good, or at least
enough good "to make up for the public revenue that we're losing."
Funny he should mention taxes: Wal-Mart and the Waltons have, after all,
been notably reluctant to pay them. Not only has the company lobbied for tax
breaks in communities all over the nation, the Waltons--the family that former
Wal-Mart board member Hillary Clinton has called "the best America has to
offer"--have campaigned vigorously against the estate tax. They have donated
money to its opponents, Republicans like John Thune of South Dakota and David
Vitter of South Carolina, and enlisted one of Washington's top lobbying firms,
Patton Boggs--a leading anti-estate tax lobbyist--to represent their
interests.
Chuck Collins of Responsible Wealth, a group of well-off people who strongly
favor the estate tax, observes that the Waltons sometimes say the estate tax is
not a priority for the family. "That may be true from their perspective," he
says, "but it's a bit like an elephant saying it's really not interested in
stepping on anthills. When you're America's wealthiest family, you are a
philanthropic and lobbying heavyweight even on your minor interests." For
instance, Senator Blanche Lincoln of Arkansas, one of a handful of Democrats
who draw checks from the Waltons, supports estate-tax repeal (or crippling
"reform"). "Senator Lincoln will wax eloquent about the small farmers of
Arkansas," Collins says, "but what's really on her mind is Walton."
In addition to campaigning specifically against the estate tax, the Waltons
also give money to groups that generally favor tax giveaways to the rich, like
Americans for Tax Reform. And the Waltons have already reaped the benefits of
tax policies enacted by the conservatives they helped put in office: This year
Bush's dividend tax cut will save the family $51 million, according to Lee
Farris, an estate-tax expert with the Boston-based United for a Fair
Economy.
The Waltons' philanthropy--and their hostility to paying their fair share of
taxes--also needs to be viewed in the context of tax subsidies Wal-Mart has
received for building new stores, which Good Jobs First places at more than $1
billion, an estimate that does not include the many other ways taxpayers
subsidize Wal-Mart stores, for instance, through numerous forms of public
assistance--Medicaid, Food Stamps, public housing--that often allow workers to
subsist on Wal-Mart's low wages. A report by the House Education and Workforce
Committee conservatively places the latter at $420,750 per store; the Wal-Mart
Foundation's per-store charitable giving is just 11 percent of that amount
($47,222).
In addition to spending on Republican candidates, the Waltons have lavished
funds on right-wing ideological institutions--organizations that serve the
interest of wealthy individuals and lawless antiunion companies like Wal-Mart.
From 1998 through 2003 the WFF contributed $25,000 to the Heritage Foundation,
$15,000 to the Cato Institute, $125,000 to the Hudson Institute, $155,000 to
the Goldwater Institute, $70,000 to the National Right to Work Legal Defense
Foundation, $300,000 to the Mackinac Center for Public Policy, $185,000 to the
Pacific Research Institute for Public Policy and $350,000 to the Evergreen
Freedom Foundation.
Both the family and the company have made education a major funding
priority. Many of the WFF's education gifts have a distinct ideological tilt,
emphasizing a "free market" approach to education reform, a vision the late
John Walton embraced with particular enthusiasm. The WFF funds advocacy groups
promoting conservative school "reform"--otherwise known as privatization--like
the Center for Education Reform and the Black Alliance for Educational Options,
as well as the actual programs these groups champion: charter schools and
voucher programs. (The BAEO did not return calls for this article.)
Among such projects, the Waltons tend to fund the most mind-numbing and
cultish, giving in 2003 alone nearly $3 million to Knowledge Is Power (KIPP)
schools and millions more to other schools using the KIPP curriculum, which
emphasizes regimented recitation rather than critical or creative thinking.
Particularly widespread in low-income neighborhoods, such schools seem bent on
disciplining and exhorting the poor rather than developing human potential
(much like Wal-Mart as a workplace, with its relentless company cheers and
dead-end jobs). Several years ago the principal of New York City's John A.
Reisenbach Charter School, which uses the KIPP curriculum and received $118,000
from the Waltons in 2003, told me proudly, as we watched fidgety second graders
chant meaningless slogans, "We are getting them ready for business."
The WFF has become the single largest source of funding for the voucher and
charter school movement. Walton funding allows some charter schools to spend
more per pupil than "competing" public schools. The ironic result is that while
these projects are supposed to demonstrate to the public the wonders of a
marketized approach to education, the WFF's money gives its grantees an
advantage over other schools, allowing them to perform better than they would
otherwise. "[The Waltons] claim to support competition and the free market,"
says Paul Dunphy, a policy analyst for Citizens for Public Schools, a
Boston-based coalition, "but actually they are manipulating the market,
conferring advantage on their pet projects."
It's a fitting paradox, since the Wal-Mart economic model, like almost
anything held up as an example of the beauty of the free market, contains so
many contradictions (yes, it's extremely profitable, but look at all those tax
subsidies). Because so much Walton and Wal-Mart philanthropy is crudely
self-interested, it's tempting to find an equally crude motive for the Walton
family's interest in education; many Wal-Mart critics have assumed that the
Waltons must be planning to reap several more fortunes through for-profit
education companies. That's not completely baseless: John Walton was briefly
involved in such a venture. However, he backed out, realizing such profiteering
was hurting the credibility of his education reform efforts. And so far,
for-profit education is still not a very profitable industry--especially when
compared with retail.
The Waltons' motives for supporting the privatization of education seem--at
this writing, anyway--to be ideological, even idealistic, rather than an
elaborate backdrop to a new money-making scheme. Like many rich Americans who
have helped to finance the far right's rise to power, they have embraced a
worldview in which what's good for the wealthy is good for everyone else. And
greater cultural acceptance of the unfettered market--through an increasing
tolerance for privatization of all kinds--will certainly make the world safer
for a family business that thrives on weak government and lack of regulation.
But it's also likely that the Waltons, like most right-wingers, sincerely
believe that their ideas have the potential to improve people's lives. Why
wouldn't the Waltons genuinely believe in the free market? Look how well it has
served them.
Helen Walton, now 85 and in poor health, is expected to donate almost all of
her personal fortune--worth $18 billion--to the WFF upon her death, which, as
the NCRP points out, will make that entity the richest foundation in the world.
This should disturb progressives, since so much Walton money goes to support
conservative causes. Yet although the current direction and political leanings
of Walton "philanthropy" are clear, the future is a mystery. As Krehely
observes, nothing is known about the politics or interests of Sam Walton's
grandchildren. This matters in a family foundation; this fall the Olin
Foundation closed its doors, having spent down its endowment because the older
generation did not trust the younger Olins to carry on the family's right-wing
traditions. Since the Waltons don't say much about their future plans, or about
their internal family politics, it's unclear what lies in store for
this--currently--right-wing fortune.
"The Waltons could be an enormous force for good," says Responsible Wealth's
Chuck Collins. "As the company's biggest shareholders, they could decide that
Wal-Mart could pay a living wage. They could use their charitable dollars not
to undermine public education but to boost educational opportunity. They could
become major contributors to social good. But they're not."
One item in the Walton Family Foundation's most recent IRS filing shows how
uninterested this family is in true social responsibility: a measly $6,000 to
something called the Wal-Mart Associates in Need Fund. Contrast that with the
millions the family spends promoting right-wing causes, and it becomes
painfully clear that the Waltons value conservative ideology far more than they
value the human beings who have made them the richest family on earth. Told
about these figures, Kathleen MacDonald, a Wal-Mart candy department clerk in
Aiken, South Carolina, responded bluntly, "All I have to say about that is, it
doesn't surprise me. Like Bush, they don't have a clue what working families go
through." MacDonald would like to see The Simple Life do a show about working
at Wal-Mart. "I could see Paris Hilton on a register at Christmastime, or
stocking shelves," she says. Or perhaps Alice Walton as a greeter, on her feet
all day, thanking us for shopping at Wal-Mart.
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