Will AI Data Centers Cause an Eminent Domain Explosion?
John Cornyn Reverses Position on Nuking Filibuster to Pass SAVE America Act
CNN Proves False Narratives Are a Network Feature; WaPo Upset Photographers It Does...
Bombshell Federal Lawsuit Says Teachers Abused Students for Decades in Small Wisconsin Sch...
Ayatollah Khamenei Opposed His Son As His Successor As Reports Swirl He May...
The FBI Just Issued This Warning to Police Departments in California
The 3 Big Lies About the Iran War
Florida Teens Accused of Plotting to Kill Classmate to Resurrect Sandy Hook Shooter
Farm Labor Company Operator Pleads Guilty to RICO Charge in Worker Exploitation Case
Venezuelan Man Accused of Assaulting Federal Agent, Grabbing Gun During Arrest in Michigan
This Major Insurance Company Agreed to Pay $117M Over Allegedly Overcharging Medicare for...
James Carville Admits He Has 'Trump Derangement Syndrome' — Says He Prays for...
Pennsylvania Dentist Among Three Found Guilty in $30M Medicaid Fraud Conspiracy
James Talarico Quietly Deletes Endorsement Page Showcasing His Most Radical Supporters
New York Man Accused of Threatening President Trump, ICE Agents on YouTube
OPINION

The Hypocrisy of The Coca-Cola Co.

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
The Hypocrisy of The Coca-Cola Co.
AP Photo/Seth Perlman, File

In March of last year, days after Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp signed new voting reform legislation, Atlanta-based Coca-Cola CEO James Quincey said, "This legislation is unacceptable. It is a step backwards ... and needs to be remedied, and we will continue to advocate for it both in private and now even more in public."

Advertisement

The massive soft drink company wasn't alone; the legislation brought a wave of corporate backlash aimed at Kemp, Georgia Republicans and Republicans in general. Within days, Major League Baseball had pulled the All-Star Game out of the state. Delta Air Lines, Home Depot, Porsche Cars and the Atlanta Falcons -- all Georgia-based companies -- also slammed the law based on false Democratic Party talking points about what it said and did.

And, of course, Coca-Cola also tweeted its displeasure with the law.

One year later, Coca-Cola is eerily silent on Russia's invasion of Ukraine. Russia is one of the company's most profitable markets, as the soda giant operates out of the country as Swiss-based bottler Coca-Cola HBC. It announced last Tuesday that it had contingency plans to cope with the crisis, which included stockpiling ingredients to limit any disruption in their massive Russian market.

Coca-Cola HBC gets approximately 21% of its volume from Russia and Ukraine, where it also has operations. The workers in Ukraine were sent home last week.

Unlike other U.S. companies, such as Harley-Davidson, Inc., energy giants BP and Shell, global bank HSBC, Disney and AerCap that all joined a mounting list of companies exiting Russia -- an exodus with real consequences for the Russian people and their economy that helps put the squeeze on Putin's relationship with his people -- Coke has done nothing at the time of this publication.

Advertisement

Related:

CORPORATIONS WOKE

They have also not issued any statement condemning Russia's actions in Ukraine at the time of this publication, nor have they tweeted anything that even remarkably resembles criticism of Russia's actions going all the way back to before Russia crossed into Ukraine at the end of February.

Their website has nothing, either. The statement at the top of the page is on climate change.

However, there are plenty of syrupy tweets about their new limited-release soda Starlight on both of their Twitter accounts.

In short, Coca-Cola has no problem taking a whack at the Republican governor for enacting a law they clearly had not read. Still, they cannot take a stand against Russia, whose leader is massacring people in Ukraine.

Why? Well, first, because Coke is beholden to coddling the activist portion of their shareholders. They are leftists with zero love for anyone conservative.

Second, Coke made the calculation last year that consequences would be minimal in Georgia. It's not like the state government was going to block sales. But even if there were a conservative boycott, they could more than make up for it in global markets in places such as Russia.

In short, Coke won't take a stand on Ukraine, nor has it ceased operations in Russia, because that would affect the bottom line. That would involve doing something brave, not just something easy like jumping on the woke bandwagon.

Advertisement

Right now, public opinion in Russia is at a tipping point. An outspoken Coca-Cola, a company with a popular product, could actually have an effect. But Coke won't do it.

They thought wokeness would be good for business. Taking a principled stand rarely is, at least in the short term.

Salena Zito is a CNN political analyst, and a staff reporter and columnist for the Washington Examiner. She reaches the Everyman and Everywoman through shoe-leather journalism, traveling from Main Street to the beltway and all places in between.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement