The US Chamber of Commerce, which proclaims itself to be "the world's
largest business federation representing more than three million
businesses and organizations of every size," has a big problem on its
hand.
High-profile companies have been quitting the Chamber, a
virtual Who's Who of top businesses, including Apple, PG&E, Nike,
and Exelon.
The reason: the US Chamber's opposition to the Waxman-Markey climate change bill.
The
US Chamber points out that "ore than 96% of U.S. Chamber members are
small businesses with 100 employees or fewer" and that "As the voice of
business, the Chamber's core purpose is to fight for free enterprise
before Congress, the White House, regulatory agencies, the courts, the
court of public opinion, and governments around the world."
But its members seem to feel that the U.S. Chamber is not listening.
And,
as a member of my local Chamber of Commerce, I've been upset about some
of the positions staked out by the US Chamber: they didn't truly seem
to help small businesses.
I had mentioned something to my local
chamber, but it turns out that local chambers of commerce are not
necessarily members of the US Chamber -- which is a branding problem.
For both the US Chamber and local chambers.
I'm
a member of a local chamber, but have no input on what the US Chamber's
policy making function. Yet I was upset enough to consider quitting my
local chamber, which has nothing to do with the US Chamber.
Meanwhile,
the US Chamber seems to be responding to the news that more big-name
members are quitting, seemingly each day, by sticking to its guns.
I'm sure that the US Chamber is losing smaller companies, too.
Yet
as a call-to-action for prospective members, the Chamber says, "The
Chamber understands your needs and protects your livelihood as if they
are our own."
It's not a matter of them being "as if they are
our own." As a membership-based organization whose mission is "to fight
for free enterprise," its members' needs and livelihood are their own.
So, the lessons learned:
Meanwhile,
I'd have to say that the local chambers seem to be ignoring the matter,
too. They may operate independently, but a lot of people may not
realize that. There's bound to be a lot of people and local businesses
upset, and that could leave them with negative feelings about all
chambers of commerce -- which is not what you want right before renewal
season. I know it's not the local chambers' battle, but they need to
let their local members know they're not part of the US Chamber.
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