Politics | North Carolina County Bans Coke Machines Over New Voting Law Surry County in North Carolina says company is catering to 'bigoted leftist mob' By Arden Dier Posted Jun 4, 2021 12:27 PM CDT Copied In this June 28, 2018, file photo, a Coca-Cola vending machine sits in the basement of the state Capitol in Sacramento, Calif. (AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli, File) Good luck finding a Coke at government facilities in Surry County, NC. Nearly two months after Coca Cola's CEO voiced opposition to Georgia's new voting restrictions, leaders of the county in neighboring North Carolina punished him with a measure requiring the removal of all Coke machines from government facilities, reports the Hill. The measure—a direct response to James Quincey calling Georgia's law "unacceptable" and "a step backwards" in terms of "broad access to voting"—passed the Board of Commissioners with a 3-2 vote on May 17, per NBC News. In a letter announcing the move, County Commissioner Ed Harris told Quincey the board felt the removal "was the best way to take a stand and express our disappointment in Coca-Cola's actions, which are not representative of most views of our citizens." "Our Board ... sincerely wishes that future marketing efforts and comments emanating from your company are more considerate of all your customers' viewpoints," Harris continued, accusing the Atlanta-based company of catering to "the out-of-control cancel culture and bigoted leftist mob." Quincey had denounced the Georgia law in an April 1 statement shared on Coke's website, asserting that the measure "would diminish or deter access to voting." A Coke rep tells NBC that "representatives from our local bottler … look forward to continuing their productive conversations" with county commissioners. Read These Next Miami-Dade may have made a $400 million mistake. Judge rules '86-47' flag is no threat. Clint Eastwood's son has some big news, in case you missed it. Store owner who chased, shot Black teen in back found not guilty. Report an error