KEY POINTS
  • Civil rights and activist groups are turning up the pressure on large Georgia companies like Coca-Cola and Delta Airlines to oppose sweeping voting restrictions proposed by Republican state legislators.
  • They're urging major Georgia-based corporations to speak out publicly against the proposed voting restrictions and to stop donating money to the Republican legislators sponsoring the bills.
  • Advocacy groups are turning to Georgia's powerful business community because they say trying to sway GOP lawmakers alone has little effect.
Former Georgia gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams waits to speak at a Democratic canvass kickoff as she campaigns for Joe Biden and Kamala Harris at Bruce Trent Park on October 24, 2020 in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Civil rights and activist groups are turning up the pressure on large Georgia companies like Coca-Cola and Delta Airlines to oppose sweeping voting restrictions proposed by Republican state legislators.

"We've got the power of organized people. They've got the power of organized money. And between us and them, we could put pressure on these legislators or, worst case scenario, the governor to kill these bills," Cliff Albright, co-founder of Black Voters Matter, told CNBC.