These Fortune 500 Companies Remained Silent over Trump Assassination Attempt, but Condemned January 6

Coca-Cola Corporate Headquarters
by Mary Margaret Olohan

 

A number of Fortune 500 companies that publicly condemned the Jan. 6 Capitol riot have remained silent following the July 13 attempted assassination of former President Donald Trump.

An analysis conducted by The Heritage Foundation’s Oversight Project found that eight Fortune 500 companies issued statements condemning the January 2021 Capitol riot, but stayed silent over the July 13 attempt on Trump’s life.

Those companies are AT&T, Boeing, Coca-Cola, Johnson & Johnson, McDonald’s, PayPal, Starbucks, and Visa. None of them responded to requests for comment from The Daily Signal.

“Color me completely unsurprised that the leaders of woke corporate America took no public issue with the attempted assassination of President Trump,” Oversight Project Director Mike Howell told The Daily Signal. “Patriotic Americans should remember the silence and double standards of the globalist elites.”

Their silence now comes as the leaders of other Fortune 500 companies, such as Cisco’s Chuck Robbins, expressed their sympathy to Trump and the other victims of the attack in Butler, Pennsylvania, including firefighter Corey Comperatore, who was tragically killed by one of the gunman’s bullets that day.

When Trump supporters stormed the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, many Fortune 500 companies were quick to issue statements condemning the riot.

Boeing, one of the companies that has not issued a statement on the Trump assassination attempt, released a statement from its president and CEO, David Calhoun, that addressed “defending democracy here, and around the world.”

“In the spirit of bipartisanship, we encourage them to work with President-elect [Joe] Biden to unify our nation,” the statement said of elected officials.

McDonald’s CEO Chris Kempczinski described the Jan. 6 incident as “an attack on all those things that people cherish and associate with America,” adding: “That includes McDonald’s.”

“The violent unrest we’re witnessing in our nation’s capital is both shocking and disturbing,” wrote PayPal CEO Dan Schulman at the time. “It violates the very foundation of our democracy.”

“Following an election in which we saw record excitement and turnout among Americans, we must unite together to move forward as a nation,” he added. “I urge leaders from both sides of the aisle to take a stand and call for the violence to end. Now, more than ever, we need to foster an environment of inclusion and healing, where we listen to each other, respect each other, and keep our country as a beacon for democracy.”

Coca-Cola issued a statement calling the day an “offense to the ideals of American democracy.” A Starbucks news release on the riot condemned it as a “disruption to American democracy.” Visa’s then- CEO, Alfred Kelly Jr., posted on LinkedIn that it was “one of the lowest points in our 245-year history as a nation.”

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Mary Margaret Olohan is a senior reporter for The Daily Signal and the author of “Detrans: True Stories of Escaping the Gender Ideology Cult.” She previously reported for both The Daily Caller and The Daily Wire.
Photo “Coca-Cola Building” by Kakidai. CC BY-SA 4.0.

 

 


Appeared at and reprinted from DailySignal.com

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