Microsoft is temporarily halting political donations through its political action committee after facing a backlash from employees protesting lack of influence over which candidates and campaigns the organization supported.

Maciej Ceglowski, founder of social bookmarking site Pinboard, posted an internal email from Microsoft Corporate Vice President of Government Affairs Fred Humphries Jr. to members of MSPAC, the company’s political action committee, outlining changes coming to the organization. That includes a “brief hiatus” on political contributions that began on July 1 and will be in effect until the fall.

“We have heard from many employees that greater transparency is needed when it comes to MSPAC policies, giving criteria, and how decisions are made in terms of the candidates we support. Our operations are realigning to reflect that feedback,” according to the email.

A Microsoft spokesman said the company does not comment on internal employee emails.

GeekWire reached out to Ceglowski, and we will update this story if we hear back. Ceglowski told Fast Company that he transcribed the message from a screenshot of the document sent by a Microsoft employee. The employee confirmed the document’s authenticity to Fast Company.

Last month, reports surfaced that a group of Microsoft employees lobbied co-workers to stop donating to MSPAC because they didn’t have influence over which candidates and campaigns the PAC supported. The employees argued that MSPAC used their money to support candidates that conflicted with important company values like diversity and inclusion.

In addition to shutting down contributions until the fall, MSPAC will form new employee advisory councils to increase transparency and give employees more of a voice in how the PAC contributions are spent, according to the document. Humphries promised members more communication from him and the Corporate, External and Legal Affairs group about MSPAC in the future.

According to the most recent disclosures filed with the Federal Election Commission, dating back to the beginning of the year, MSPAC has contributed to representatives and campaigns on all sides of the political spectrum. Here are a few notable donations:

Microsoft’s PAC donated a combined $10,000 to the primary and general election campaigns for Republican Sen. Majority Leader Mitch McConnell. MSPAC also contributed $2,500 to a campaign committee for Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, a Democrat.

MSPAC donated to a number of U.S. congressional representatives from its home state of Washington including Democratic Rep. Suzan Delbene, a former Microsoft employee, and Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers, the highest ranking Republican in Congress.

The PAC donated $15,000 each to the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee and the National Republican Senate Committee.

Editor’s Note: This story has been updated to include more recent and accurate campaign contribution data.

Microsoft workers have recently spoken out about the company’s relationship with government organizations as well. The company faced internal strife over a $480 million contract it won to supply the U.S. Army with 100,000 HoloLens mixed reality headsets.

A group of employees last year implored Microsoft not to bid on the $10 billion “JEDI” cloud contract to refresh the technology infrastructure for the U.S. Department of Defense. Microsoft did bid on the contract, and now it is a finalist along with cloud rival Amazon.

Employees at big tech companies are speaking out more to persuade their companies to adopt strong stances on key issues. In May, more than 7,600 software engineers, managers, designers, and other Amazon workers signed an open letter to CEO Jeff Bezos and the Amazon board of directors asking the company to adopt a comprehensive climate change plan. Last November, a contingent of Google workers across the globe walked off the job to protest how the company handled sexual misconduct accusations against top executives.

After the memo hit the web, several Microsoft employees tweeted their approval of the company’s decision.

Yes! This is a step in the right direction. It must become (and remain) unacceptable for MSPAC to give to congresspeople that actively work against equality, LGBTQ rights, and the rights of refugees. ✊ https://t.co/5B860SqWqb — Nick Stenning (@nickstenning) July 23, 2019

I'm happy to hear this. Actions speak louder than words. We reflect our values in those actions. Microsoft's actions are inherently great. We must continue to push for those actions to also be good. Thank you to the LT for correcting course. https://t.co/tnyRw7yqEv — Chris Anderson (@crandycodes) July 24, 2019

If you're an employee who pushed for this please let Brad, Fred, and others see your appreciation. Our actions shouldn't be just to put pressure on management. We should also celebrate with them when progress is made! https://t.co/LXzffZFrng — Levi Broderick (@LeviBroderick) July 23, 2019

My email of appreciation. pic.twitter.com/RwQSZY5bR3 — Paul Montgomery (@pmontgomery) July 23, 2019

It was a whole lot of employees yelling. I was just the most cantankerous and public about it. 😃 — Carmen Crincoli ⭐️ (@CarmenCrincoli) July 24, 2019

Here is the full text of the memo: