High-profile CEOs are banding together to call for an end to the death penalty


Eighteen founders and CEOs released a letter today calling for an international end to the death penalty, and asked fellow business leaders to join them in a campaign to abolish the practice in countries including the US and Egypt.
The signatories include Richard Branson, founder of the Virgin Group and leader of the CEO campaign; Ariana Huffington, co-founder of the Huffington Post and founder and CEO of Thrive Global; and Ben Cohen and Jerry Greenfield, the founders of the Ben & Jerry’s ice cream brand.
Jared Smith, co-founder of management software company Qualtrics, and Mo Ibrahim, founder of African telecommunications company Celtel, are among the other noteworthy names on the list. The campaign is being coordinated by the nonprofit Responsible Business Initiative for Justice, which supports businesses in advocating for criminal justice reform.
Calling the death penalty inhumane, the letter argues that it perpetuates inequality and racial injustice. “No issue is more intricately tied to the racial and socioeconomic biases that permeate justice systems than the death penalty,” the letter reads. “In many countries, ethnic minorities and the poor are still more likely to be prosecuted, sentenced to death, and ultimately executed. The abolition of capital punishment is a critical step in the movement toward racial and social equality.”
In addition to the moral and ethical problems it raises, the death penalty, the executives argue, does not deter crime and eats up public funding that would be better directed toward improving education and public health and safety.
The CEOs’ call to action is the latest indicator of business leaders’ growing willingness to speak out on political, social, and environmental issues. The conscious capitalism movement, which holds that businesses have an obligation to society as well as shareholders, was further ingrained in the aftermath of 2020’s Black Lives Matter protests, which led to widespread discussions about the power companies have to bring about social change and popularized the idea that business leaders’ silence on racism is tantamount to complacency.
But while it’s noteworthy when a group of high-powered CEOs take a stand on a social issue, it’s their actions in the weeks and months that follow that are telling.
The 18 executives who joined the death-penalty opposition campaign did so in a personal capacity, and called on government officials to commute death sentences, stop executives, and support bills or ballot initiatives to get rid of the death penalty. “We commit to using our voices and our reach as business leaders to support ending the death penalty everywhere,” they pledged, “beginning with signing this declaration.”
These are the executives who have signed onto the campaign so far:
Richard Branson
Arianna Huffington
Alessandro Boglilio
Ben Cohen
Bert Jacobs
François-Henri Pinault
Guilherme Leal
Helene Gayle
Jared Smith
Jean Oelwang
Jerry Greenfield
Martha Lane Fox
Merck Mercuriadis
Mike Novogratz
Mo Ibrahim
Nicolas Debray
Robert F. Smith
Strive Masiyiwa