03 April 2006
Nine out of ten people in Britain want the Government to bring in enforceable rules to ensure businesses minimise any harm from their operations, especially to poor communities and the environment, according to a new ICM poll published today.
The poll, commissioned by the CORE Coalition and the Trade Justice Movement, also reveals voters believe company directors should be legally held to account for their companies’ impact on wider society.
It comes as trade secretary Alan Johnson makes a keynote speech today (3 April) on UK competitiveness and international trade at the annual conference of the British Chambers of Commerce in London.
Publication of the poll coincides with the launch of a campaign, Right Corporate Wrongs, which unites two coalitions representing more than nine million members. The campaign, backed by groups including ActionAid, Amnesty International, Friends of the Earth and War on Want, aims to improve the Government’s company law reform bill. This bill represents the biggest reform of company law for 150 years.
The poll highlights public support for the Government to introduce enforceable rules on business in order to help deliver trade justice around the world.
The main results are:
More than 100,000 supporters of the CORE Coalition and the Trade Justice Movement have already written to their MPs, urging them to call on industry minister Alun Michael to amend the bill to make company directors legally responsible for the impacts of their businesses on people and the environment. Over the next few weeks, activists will take the campaign to their MPs with local face-to-face lobbying for changes to company law.
Commenting on the findings of the poll, CORE director Deborah Doane said: "The UK Government’s voluntary approach to corporate responsibility has left companies to their own devices, failing millions of people around the world. Markets need rules to ensure that companies do not sacrifice people and planet in the name of profits. The British public are clearly in favour of new rules and now is the time for Government to act on this support."
Glen Tarman, Trade Justice Movement co-ordinator, said: "Last year, millions of people supported Make Poverty History with its demand that the UK Government make laws that stop big business profiting at the expense of people and the environment. This year, the company law reform bill is a specific opportunity for the Government to take concrete action and deliver on its promises to make poverty history and help deliver trade justice. That is why campaigners from across the UK will now start visiting their MPs in the coming weeks to get our message across, with many tens of thousands more contacting their MP. The Government must bring in new laws for trade justice with this bill."
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