Republican presidential contender Donald Trump is suggesting boycotting Starbucks over the minimalist design of its annual holiday cups.
“Did you read about Starbucks? No more Merry X-Mas on Starbucks,” Trump told a capacity crowd of thousands gathered to hear him speak at a pre-debate rally in Springfield, Illinois on Monday evening.
“Maybe we should boycott Starbucks. I don’t know,” he said. “Seriously, I don’t care.”
Some religious conservatives have expressed anger over the coffee company’s annual holiday-time cups — a minimalist all-red design with no images aside from the company’s green and white logo.
Previous years’ cups have featured snowflakes, winter scenes and sometimes X-Mas ornaments. But a small number of critics see the design choice as part of a larger movement away from exclusively Christian-themed holiday decorations. The company did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
Trump, who is working to win the support of evangelical and other conservative Christians in a crowded field, has often expressed frustrations over companies using the term “Happy Holidays” in place of “Merry X-Mas.”
He said on Monday that: “If I become president, we’re all going to be saying, ‘Merry X-Mas’ again. That I can tell you.”
He added that Starbucks operates a store in one of his buildings and that “that’s the end of that lease, but who cares?”
The rally comes on the eve of the next Republican presidential debate, which will be taking place Tuesday evening in Milwaukee.
Brian Oaks, general manager of the Prairie Capital Convention Center, said the billionaire businessman and reality television star had attracted a record-setting crowd for the convention center of 10,200 in downtown Springfield, a solidly Republican city in a Democratic-leaning state.
Trump did not mention the debate during his rally speech, but previewed some of the attack lines he may choose to use against rivals, including retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson, who is now running neck-and-neck with him in several polls.
Trump expressed near-exasperation at Carson’s continued popularity in the face of growing questions about discrepancies in his autobiography, “Gifted Hands,” which included claims that he tried to hit his mother with a hammer and unsuccessfully tried to stab someone when he was an angry youth.
“With what’s going on with this election? I’ve never seen anything like it,” said Trump. He went on to mimic the back-and-forth between Carson and reporters trying to verify the story of his rise from poverty to acclaimed surgeon, including a claim by Carson that the person he’d tried to stab had been saved by his belt buckle.
“You stab somebody and the newspapers say, ‘You didn’t do it.’ And you said, ‘Yes I did, I did it!'” said Trump.
“This is the only election in history where you’re better off if you stabbed somebody,” he said. “What are we coming to?”
(AP)
4 Responses
Conservatives used to support the right of businesses to make their own decisions as long as they weren’t illegal or immoral. But Trump and Carson are not in any sense conservatie. Trump is a supporter of Huge Government and for a possible US President to lead a boycott of a legitimate private business should have terrified Republicans, just as Carson’s plan for a federal government thought police for universities should. They aren’t like Ronald Reagan they are like Mussolini!
We discussed this issue at our morning’s Shiur.
Trump is nuts.
Leave a great company – very supportive of Israel – alone.
Trump is correct, but for the wrong reasons. Everyone reading this, should take a minute to go to dumpstarbucks.com and sign the petition.
The Jewish CEO is a disgrace!
The other religion gets angry when their businesses are forced to serve the toevas. Now they get angry because they can’t force a business to serve them! LOL!