Over the last few months, numerous companies have left ALEC over its denial of climate change and secretive operations. Here is a timeline of the recent ALEC exodus:

August 19th: Microsoft announced it was leaving ALEC.

September 3rd: 55 organizations, including Common Cause, sent a letter to Google executives asking the company to leave ALEC.

September 22nd: On National Public Radio, Google Chairman Eric Schmidt said ALEC was “lying” about climate change and funding ALEC was a mistake. Google confirmed that it was also leaving ALEC.

September 23rd: Facebook announced that it was unlikely to renew its ALEC membership.

September 24th: Yelp confirmed to Common Cause that it was no longer a member of ALEC and left the organization months ago. After numerous public statements saying they were staying with ALEC, Yahoo announced it was also leaving ALEC.

September 25th: Uber and Lyft, two of ALEC’s top prospects and meeting attendees, confirmed to Common Cause that they have no plans in joining or continuing to participate in ALEC.

September 26th: International Paper confirmed to Common Cause that it was no longer an ALEC member.

September 29th: Occidental Petroleum announced it was leaving ALEC.

September 30th: The Center for Media and Democracy announced News Corp and Overstock.com have both cut ties with ALEC.

October 7th: 81 organizations, including Common Cause, sent a letter to eBay executives asking the corporation leave ALEC.

November 6th: SAP, one of the largest software companies in the world and chair of ALEC’s private board, told the Center for Media and Democracy it was leaving ALEC because of ALEC’s work on climate change denial, renewable energy, voting rights, and gun control.

November 10th: An AOL company official confirmed to Common Cause that the company had decided to leave ALEC “a number of weeks ago.”

December 18th: eBay confirmed on Twitter that they would not renew their ALEC membership