FedEx cuts ties with the NRA

Authored by thinkprogress.org and submitted by jlew24asu

FedEx said on Tuesday that it will stop providing discounts to members of the National Rifle Association, eight months after ThinkProgress reported that the shipping company was helping the gun lobby entice members.

The decision comes three days after a gunman entered a Pittsburgh synagogue and shot and killed 11 people and wounded several others.

The move is also significant, as FedEx did not end its relationship with the NRA after the 17 students were shot and killed in Parkland, Florida in February. After that shooting, more than two dozen companies that previous offered discounts to NRA members cut ties with the organization. The decisions were sparked by public outrage, social media campaigns, and threatened boycotts.

In a statement Tuesday, a spokesperson for FedEx told ThinkProgress that its decision had nothing to do with the NRA, noting that the NRA is one of more than 100 companies affected by an internal policy change.

“We are transitioning some account holders in more than 100 organizations in the FedEx Marketing Alliance program to other pricing programs,” said spokesperson Jim McCluskey. “Account holders that participated in the program will continue to receive the same discounts on FedEx shipping, and we will work directly with these customers to ensure a seamless transition.”

Still, gun control advocates credited the decision as a win.

After the Parkland shooting in February, a number of high-profile companies said they’d no longer partner with the NRA because of the group’s extreme stance on guns. Both Delta and United Airlines said they’d no longer be offering discounts to members traveling to the NRA’s annual meeting. Various car rental companies, insurers, and financial companies also said they’d no longer participate in programs with the gun lobby.

But FedEx refused to back down and remained one of just a handful of companies still offering some kind of discount to NRA members. At the time, the company stood behind its decision.

“FedEx has never provided any donation or sponsorship to the NRA which is one of hundreds of alliance and association participants that serve more than one million customers,” the statement said.

In late February, ThinkProgress reported that FedEx may have had a financial incentive to keep supporting the NRA. According to an internal document obtained by ThinkProgress, FedEx was bending its own rules on gun shipments for dozens of gun manufacturers and dealers. While FedEx typically requires businesses to ship firearms through priority overnight services, “Some customers have been approved for an exception to ship firearms with a 2-day (AM or PM) service,” according to the document.

SourceWebMD on October 30th, 2018 at 21:30 UTC »

While this is good, did no one read the article?

In a statement Tuesday, a spokesperson for FedEx told ThinkProgress that its decision had nothing to do with the NRA, noting that the NRA is one of more than 100 companies affected by an internal policy change.

“We are transitioning some account holders in more than 100 organizations in the FedEx Marketing Alliance program to other pricing programs,” said spokesperson Jim McCluskey. “Account holders that participated in the program will continue to receive the same discounts on FedEx shipping, and we will work directly with these customers to ensure a seamless transition.”

Nayre_Trawe on October 30th, 2018 at 19:49 UTC »

What's with the late delivery on this, FedEx?

dick_inspector on October 30th, 2018 at 19:30 UTC »

Companies are having to make decisions. Those decisions are based on tons of consimer research. FedEx discovered there is a larger market of NRA Detractors than of NRA supporters. To me, that's good news.

Edit: I don't want to go through each response individually so:

1) This article was updated with new information nearly 3 hours after I posted.

2) FedEx did not cut discounts for all partners, that is patently false and FedEx only released new information to soften the blow to both sides.

3) I am still glad that FedEx decided to cut the partnership even if they didn't do it with gusto.

4) FedEx made this decision days after another mass shooting. This is no coincidence.

5) Brigaders who accuse me of not reading the article just need to latch on to any little thing that makes me look wrong because they don't want to admit that they are not a silent majority; they're a loud and annoying minority.