Betsy McCaughey

Betsy McCaughey

Opinion

Don’t buy Al Sharpton’s race-hustling shakedown of McDonald’s

Racism is abhorrent. So are shakedown artists who cry racism to rake in cash.

Al Sharpton publicly threatened McDonald’s CEO Chris Kempczinski last week, using the same language his National Action Network has used for three decades to squeeze cash out of major corporations.

Sharpton referred to “multiple accusations of racial discrimination” by McDonald’s and warned that NAN is poised to mobilize nationally against the company.

“You cannot sell Black folks Big Macs and give us little justice.”

Mainstream media glorified this threat, calling Sharpton a “social justice leader.” 

Race hustler is more like it.

Racial discrimination should be punished to the full extent of the law. 

But Sharpton is no judge or juror. He uses thuggery, not due process.

Is McDonald’s guilty of racial discrimination? 

That’s for courts to decide. 

Black franchise owners sued McDonald’s alleging they were mistreated compared with white owners. 

But a federal judge threw out one of those lawsuits for lack of evidence in June 2021. 

Another was dismissed in October 2022.

Sharpton also claims he’s “outraged at the removal of John Rogers, a well-respected business leader for the Black community,” from McDonald’s corporate board. 

Truth is, Rogers served 20 years, the maximum according to corporate policy.

Al Sharpton warned that the National Action Network would mobilize against McDonald’s. Michael Nigro/Sipa USA

He left at the same time as a white director who’d also maxed out.

Finally, Sharpton accused the hamburger giant of not giving “Black-owned media” a “fair share of McDonald’s supersized advertising budgets.” 

That charge echoes a lawsuit by black entrepreneur Byron Allen.

The case goes to trial May 30. 

Let the jury decide, not Sharpton.

For many years, corporations have paid off Sharpton’s group to avoid boycotts and rallies outside their headquarters — the same “action” Sharpton’s letter threatens to take against McDonald’s.

Sharpton referred to “multiple accusations of racial discrimination” by McDonald’s. REUTERS

A $100,000 donation seems cheap compared to the damage he could do.

Sharpton is feared partly because the Democratic Party puts him on a pedestal.

Vice President Kamala Harris and nine other senior Biden administration officials — nearly the entire Cabinet — spoke at NAN’s annual convention last month.

President Joe Biden’s three-minute video last week launching his re-election bid features not one but four images of Sharpton.

As if Sharpton were a national hero when in fact he’s a race hustler. 

In 1987, Sharpton accused six white men, including upstate New York prosecutor Steven Pagones, of raping a black teenager, Tawana Brawley, smearing her with feces and leaving her wrapped in garbage bags.

Horrific if true, but a grand jury ruled the charges a hoax, and Pagones won a defamation suit against Sharpton. 

Even now, Sharpton refuses to apologize, insisting that it wasn’t his job to determine whether the teen’s story was true.

After the Brawley sham, Sharpton moved to strong-arming corporations.

“Sharpton has enriched himself and NAN for years by threatening companies with bad publicity if they didn’t come to terms with him,” noted Ken Boehm, co-founder of the National Legal and Policy Center in Virginia.

In 2014, Gov. Andrew Cuomo and Mayor Bill de Blasio celebrated Sharpton’s 60th birthday at a lavish affair. President Barack Obama sent an aide to read birthday greetings. 

Already, the Democratic Party had made him an icon, choosing to ignore the truth.

Reverend Al Sharpton arrives for the White House Correspondents’ Association dinner at the Washington Hilton in Washington, DC on April 29, 2023. AFP via Getty Images

Sharpton personally failed to pay millions in back taxes and routinely stiffed travel agencies, hotels and landlords, reported The New York Times that year.

His organization NAN owed years of payroll taxes and was “among the most delinquent nonprofit organizations in the nation.”

Brazenly, Sharpton sold NAN the rights to his own life story in 2018 to take out another $531,000 for himself.

The tragic 2020 death of George Floyd raised the nation’s consciousness but also brought flush times for race hustlers.

NAN raised a record $11 million that year, and since then Sharpton has doubled his compensation and elevated his lifestyle.

NAN forks over nearly $1 million a year for private jets and limos.

That kind of luxury spending is taboo for legitimate charities.

Shame on the Democratic Party for empowering Sharpton, who doesn’t represent justice or all African Americans.

Beware of those who demand cash while cloaking themselves in moral outrage.

Betsy McCaughey is a former lieutenant governor of New York.

Twitter: @Betsy_McCaughey