Red Bull ‘fires’ top US executives ‘who pushed for diversity and inclusion’

Red Bull fires top US executives as ‘retaliation’ for ‘leaking internal documents showing employees are furious at the company’s failure to address Black Lives Matter’

  • North America chief executive Stefan Kozak and North America president and chief marketing officer Amy Taylor were let go, the company said Tuesday 
  • Both Kozak and Taylor are said to have pushed for more diversity and inclusion
  • A third executive, head of global culture marketing Florian Klaass, has also left the energy drink brand after she allegedly approved a ‘racist’ slide shown in a meeting 
  • ‘We reject racism in every form, we always have, we always will,’ Red Bull says 

Red Bull is reported to have fired three of its top executives in the US after more than 300 employees criticized the company’s ‘public silence’ on Black Lives Matter. 

North America chief executive Stefan Kozak and North America president and chief marketing officer Amy Taylor were let go, the energy drink company said Tuesday. 

No official reason was given, but sources told Business Insider it is believed Kozak and Taylor were fired by the company leadership in Austria which blamed them for leaks and tension over diversity issues within the company. 

A leaked letter which emerged last month had criticized the company for ‘saying nothing’ amid the global anti-racism protests and ‘abandoning the communities we claim to support and foster in their time of greatest need’.  

Both Kozak and Taylor are said to have pushed for more diversity and inclusion but Taylor was ‘met with opposition’ when she called for the company to take a more public stand on racial injustice, The Wall Street Journal reports.   

Amy Taylor

North America chief executive Stefan Kozak, left, and North America president and chief marketing officer Amy Taylor, right, were let go, the energy drink company said Tuesday

A third executive, head of global culture marketing Florian Klaass, has also left after he allegedly approved a racist slide shown in a meeting. 

A leaked slide, shown at meeting three weeks later, is said to have shown racist stereotypes from countries around the world. 

It is said to have shown ‘they do our laundry’ on Mexico, ‘they make our stuff’ on China, ‘evil-doers’ on the Middle East and ‘zoo animals come from here’ on Africa.

Reports say that US employees had urged against the use of the slide but that Klaass and his team had gone ahead with it anyway. 

Red Bull has not publicly commented on why Taylor and Kozak have left the company. They said Klaass’ departure was part of downsizing, AdWeek reports. 

Staff had reportedly been warned that Kozak and Taylor’s jobs were under threat if any more sensitive information was leaked, after executives in Austria were thought to have blamed them for the leak of the letter.  

Taylor and Kozak are said to have worked together over the last several years on efforts to increase diversity at Red Bull. 

Taylor was met with opposition when she pushed for the company to speak out more publicly about racism, sources said.

The June 1 letter signed by more than 300 workers asked the company to ‘take meaningful action in the fight to end racial injustice’ in the wake of George Floyd’s killing at the hands of Minneapolis police.  

Red Bull has not publicly commented on why Taylor and Kozak have left the company. They said Klaass' departure was part of downsizing

Red Bull has not publicly commented on why Taylor and Kozak have left the company. They said Klaass’ departure was part of downsizing

The company replied to the employees’ letter on June 26, writing: ‘We reject racism in every form, we always have, and we always will. 

‘Anyone who knows anything about our company knows this.’

Another email written by Kozak referred to ‘the murder of George Floyd and countless others’ and voiced support for peaceful Black Lives Matter protests.  

Alexandre Ruberti and Marc Rosenmayr are said to be leading Red Bull North America until permanent replacements can be found. 

In a statement the company said: ‘Red Bull has always put people and their dreams and accomplishments at its core and values the contribution of each and every person—no matter who they are. 

‘We want everyone who feels this way to be welcome in Red Bull.’ 

DailyMail.com has contacted Red Bull for additional comment.