McDonald’s chief executive apologises for sending text message described as ‘racist’ after Chicago child shootings
The chief executive of McDonald’s has apologised after activists said a text he sent about shootings in Chicago was “ignorant, racist and unacceptable”.
After a black girl and a Hispanic boy were fatally shot earlier this year in Chicago, Chris Kempczinski had written in a text message that the deaths were “tragic”, adding that “with both, the parents failed those kids which I know is something you can’t say. Even harder to fix”.
The message was sent to Chicago mayor Lori Lightfoot in April, a day after the fatal shooting of seven-year-old Jaslyn Adams while she was at a McDonald’s drive-thru with her father in the city’s West Side.
A month earlier, Chicago police had fatally shot Adam Toledo, 13, in the predominantly Latino neighbourhood of Little Village.
Mr Kempczinski’s message was part of an exchange in which he thanked Ms Lightfoot for visiting the company’s Chicago-based global headquarters.
She replied: “Thanks, Chris. Great to see you in person.”
Community activists and union leaders in Chicago are demanding that he sit down with workers from ethnic minority backgrounds to “address systemic racism” at the fast-food giant in response to his text message.
In an open letter signed by a dozen groups last week, Mr Kempczinski was given a Wednesday deadline to meet with employees and community leaders in the city.
He has apologised repeatedly in the wake of the text’s public release, according to CNBC.
“Not taking the time to think about this from their viewpoint was wrong, and lacked the empathy and compassion I feel for these families,” he said in a message to employees. “This is a lesson that I will carry with me.”
Mr Kempczinski told staff his messages were “wrong”, adding: “I’m sorry I let you down. And I let myself down.”
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