An activist campaign
seeks to shame U.S. companies over Trump
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[June 24, 2016]
By Emily Stephenson
(Reuters) - Disturbed by Donald Trump's
presidential campaign, U.S. activists have taken out online
advertisements, circulated petitions, put up billboards and even chipped
in for an airplane banner to try to shame companies into dropping their
sponsorships of the Republican National Convention in July.
The campaign, led by the political arm of California-based advocacy
group Color of Change, seeks to weaken Trump's White House bid by
pressuring companies to skip the Cleveland convention where he is
expected to formally become the nominee.
"The fact of the matter is that any employee of these Fortune 500
companies that are sponsoring the convention, if any of those employees
went into their job and said the things Donald Trump is saying, they'd
be fired," said Rashad Robinson, spokesman for Color of Change PAC.
Minority groups and others have been outraged by Trump's rhetoric and
positions on immigration, including proposals to temporarily ban Muslims
from entering the country, deport millions of immigrants who enter
illegally and build a wall along the Mexican border.
The anti-Trump effort, which has yielded mixed results, has included
letters to executives of more than 30 companies including Coca-Cola <KO.N>
and Apple Inc, and conversations with officials at Amazon,
Hewlett-Packard and others.
In the case of Coca-Cola, Color of Change circulated a petition
accompanied by images showing a soda bottle labeled "Share a Coke with
the KKK." The Ku Klux Klan, or KKK, is a white supremacist group.
Companies sponsor conventions for a variety of reasons. Some are local
and want to show support. Others hope to make an impression with elected
officials or to display their brands on a nationally televised event.
The most public aspect of the activist campaign focused on Google Inc.
In April, several groups partnered on a petition they delivered to the
tech giant's campus with half a million signatures urging Google to skip
the gathering.
"Really big companies don't have any motivation to pull their support in
any way without some pressure from everyday people, from their
customers," said Mary Alice Crim of Free Press Action Fund, which joined
the campaign.
'DUMP' TRUMP BANNER
Color of Change and three other groups added to the pressure by chipping
in for an airplane banner while they were on Google's campus urging it
to "Dump" Trump.
In May, Color of Change used "geofenced" online ads, confined to
smartphones in a specific area targeted to Google workers, showing Trump
with an upturned nose and a crown on his head, according to an image
provided to Reuters. Another group, CREDO Action, placed anti-Trump ads
on Facebook <FB.O> aimed at people who listed Google as their employer.
Color of Change placed billboards in San Francisco showing Trump in a
red baseball cap emblazoned with "Make America Hate Again," a play on
the candidate's "Make America Great Again" slogan.
A separate group led by the United Food & Commercial Workers
International Union sent retail giant Wal-Mart Stores Inc a letter
urging it to withdraw support for the Republican gathering. Color of
Change signed onto the letter.
"As you must know, Mr. Trump has implied that Mexican immigrants are
drug dealers and rapists," said the letter from Making Change at
Wal-Mart, which became public on Thursday.
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Demonstrators in opposition to U.S. Republican presidential
candidate Donald Trump rally near his campaign event in Patchogue,
New York April 14, 2016. REUTERS/Johnny Milano
"If you do choose to remain silent, we must ask: Are Mr. Trump's values the same
as Walmart's values?"
DECISION TIME
The effort appears to have had little effect on overall fund-raising for
Cleveland. Emily Lauer, a spokeswoman, said the event is on track to raise the
$64 million needed to meet its budget. Trump spokeswoman Hope Hicks declined to
comment.
Some companies that gave to the convention in 2012 have decided not to do so
again, such as Hewlett-Packard, which gave computer equipment and a monetary
donation in 2012. Others, like Wal-Mart, have scaled back their contributions.
None of these companies, when reached by Reuters, attributed the moves to Trump
or outside pressure. Most said they would provide similar support to both
parties' conventions, though the full level of corporate support will not be
clear until government filings become available afterwards.
Wal-Mart spokesman Greg Hitt said the company gave $15,000 to both parties'
conventions, less than the $150,000 it gave the Republican gathering in 2012,
according to government filings.
Others have not detailed all their plans. Google, for example, will offer
live-streaming services in Cleveland, but a company spokeswoman would not tell
Reuters whether Google will also contribute cash.
Robinson said companies have been more responsive behind the scenes. He said
after exchanges with Coca-Cola, the company informed them it would not give more
than the $75,000 it already had donated, less than it gave the 2012 Republican
gathering. Coca-Cola told Reuters its support for the conventions does not
represent an endorsement.
Heidi Hess of CREDO Action said the emphasis on corporate sponsorship would not
end with the July 18-21 convention.
"I think there's still some conversation to be had about, if corporations
actually do sponsor the convention, then how do we hold them accountable
afterward?" Hess said.
(Additional reporting by Meg Garner, Deborah Todd, Lisa Baertlein and Julia
Love; Editing by Richard Valdmanis and Howard Goller)
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