The organization is partly a response to the recent setbacks for gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender rights in countries like Russia, Uganda and the Middle East. The Human Rights Campaign-led group will push for protections in the workplace globally, including in countries where LGBT individuals face legal discrimination or harassment.
"They deserve a fair chance to earn a living and provide for their families no matter where they live," said HRC President Chad Griffin.
The coalition members are: the consulting firm Accenture, AT&T Inc, software company CA Technologies, Coca-Cola, Destination Weddings Travel Group, Google, IBM, Microsoft, home furnishings maker Mitchell Gold + Bob Williams, consumer products giant Procter & Gamble Co, china and glassware company Replacements Ltd, and Symantec Corp HRC officials expect the group's members to grow.
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The group collectively employs nearly 1.4 million people in 190 countries and has combined annual revenue of nearly USD 550 billion.
The coalition will provide the members a common platform to talk about LGBT workplace protections globally. It also will be a platform for companies to get advice on how to implement LGBT friendly policies in places where legal protections may not be there, said Deena Fidas, director of HRC's Workplace Equality Program.
The new coalition will join an already existing group of advocacy organizations and companies that have been pushing more workplace protections for individuals beyond the US. For example, Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan Chase, two companies who are not in HRC's inaugural group, have been individually vocal about workplace protections in the countries they do business.
"The conversation around the positive business impacts of LGBT equality is increasingly a global one," said Todd Sears with Out Leadership, a business focused LGBT rights organization, which has held global business focused summits on LGBT workplace issues since 2011.