“We are mindful that our employees and customers hold a wide range of beliefs,” Ford Chief Executive Officer
Ford said it will no longer engage with the Human Rights Campaign’s Corporate Equality Index and various “best places to work” lists, and that it refocused employee resource groups and opened them to all its workers. The carmaker also said it would shift some of its corporate sponsorships, and comment less on polarizing issues.
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The Human Rights Campaign responded to Ford’s decision by saying consumers should take note that the automaker has “abandoned its commitment to our communities.”
“The Human Rights Campaign could not be more disappointed to see Ford Motor Company shirking its responsibility to its employees, consumers, and shareholders,” said the HRC President
The HRC’s Robinson added that nearly 30% of Gen Z identify as LGBTQ, with the community wielding $1.4 trillion in spending power, and Ford’s “shortsighted decisions will have long-term consequences.”
Ford didn’t immediately respond to the HRC’s comments.
Starbuck, a former music-video producer turned influencer based in Tennessee, has claimed credit for prompting a string of companies to change or eliminate their diversity and social impact programs. Unlike legal activists Edward Blum and Stephen Miller’s America First Legal, who’ve filed lawsuits and regulatory complaints alleging DEI programs discriminate against certain groups, Starbuck has relied on social media platform X to generate popular outrage.
Starbuck took credit for changes at Lowe’s, saying on X the company announced changes to its DEI policy after Starbuck contacted the home-improvement retailer last week. Jack Daniel’s whiskey maker
Starbuck said he was investigating Ford’s policies before the announcement. Ford declined to comment beyond the memo.
The letter marks a shift in tone from the carmaker since the 2020 murder of George Floyd, when Chairman
“This isn’t everything we want but it’s a great start,” Starbuck wrote on X. “We’re now forcing multibillion-dollar organizations to change their policies without even posting just from fear they have of being the next company that we expose.”
(Updates with the Human Rights Campaign comment from 4th paragraph)
--With assistance from
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Richard Clough, Anna Kitanaka
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