Join Us Wednesday, September 17

There won’t be a Jerry at Ben & Jerry’s anymore.

Jerry Greenfield, one of the ice cream brand’s co-founders, said late Tuesday that he was leaving the company.

Greenfield criticized the ice-cream brand’s parent company, Unilever, in his announcement, saying that it had silenced the brand’s speech on social and political issues.

“It’s with a broken heart that I’ve decided I can no longer, in good conscience, and after 47 years, remain an employee at Ben & Jerry’s,” Greenfield wrote in a statement shared by his cofounder, Ben Cohen, on X. “I am resigning from the company Ben and I started back in 1978. This is one of the hardest and most painful decisions I’ve ever made.”

Unilever bought Ben & Jerry’s for $326 million in 2000. The acquisition contained a provision that allowed Ben & Jerry’s to advocate for social and political causes.

In 2021, that part of the agreement was tested after Ben & Jerry’s said that it would stop selling its ice cream in Israeli settlements in the West Bank. A dispute between Unilever and the brand followed, including a fight in court.

“It’s profoundly disappointing to come to the conclusion that that independence, the very basis of our sale to Unilever, is gone,” Greenfield wrote in his statement.

A spokesperson for the Magnum Ice Cream Company, Unilever’s portfolio of ice cream brands, said that the company thanked Greenfield “for his service and support over many decades and wish him well in his next chapter.” Unilever is in the process of spinning off its ice cream business from the rest of the company.

“We disagree with his perspective and have sought to engage both co-founders in a constructive conversation on how to strengthen Ben & Jerry’s powerful values-based position in the world,” the spokesperson said.

“We remain committed to Ben & Jerry’s unique three-part mission — product, economic and social — and remain focused on carrying forward the legacy of peace, love, and ice cream of this iconic, much-loved brand,” the spokesperson added.

“It was always about more than just ice cream; it was a way to spread love and invite others into the fight for equity, justice and a better world,” Greenfield said.

“Coming to the conclusion that this is no longer possible at Ben & Jerry’s means I can no longer remain part of Ben & Jerry’s,” he added.

This is a developing story.



Read the full article here

Share.
Leave A Reply