Uber, Airbnb CEOs walk a tightrope in Trump era

Early on in Super Bowl 51, home rental site Airbnb ran a 30-second ad spot, “We Accept,” that showed a diverse series of faces and flashing text about inclusion and acceptance. It concludes, “The world is more beautiful the more you accept.”

Most viewers took the ad as an overt jab at President Trump’s recent actions on immigration. And if there’s any question on that, consider that Airbnb did not decide to run a Super Bowl ad until four days before the big game.

Airbnb, still a private tech startup with a $30 billion valuation, took a risk by running an ad with a political bent. After the ad ran, the company saw a 23,000% lift in social media engagement (tweets, mentions, likes or shares), according to social data tracker 4C Insights. And yet it was Budweiser that received more overt blowback for its 60-second ad, “Born the Hard Way,” which showed German-born founder Adolphus Busch as an immigrant to America. After the ad aired, the hashtag #BoycottBudweiser began trending.

But surely Anheuser-Busch InBev expected to court controversy, and with its size ($168 billion market cap) can handle it, as can Coca-Cola ($150 billion), which made a (more cautious) statement by recycling an ad from 2014 featuring multilingual versions of “America the Beautiful.”

In the days since Trump’s immigration ban and then the temporary legal stay on the ban, it is technology companies like Airbnb and Uber that have had to walk a fine line to the public, and it is companies of this size – with young, consumer-facing brands that are heavily reliant on current sentiment – that have the most to lose by speaking out.

Uber CEO Travis Kalanick in Mumbai. (Reuters)
Uber CEO Travis Kalanick in Mumbai. (Reuters)

Uber did not step into the Super Bowl, but has been just as involved in the swirl of response and controversy around Trump’s executive order. On Sunday night, Airbnb and Uber were among nearly 100 tech companies, also including Google, Facebook, LinkedIn, Netflix, and Twitter, to file an amicus brief with the US Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, opposing Trump’s travel ban. (An amicus brief is added to a lawsuit by a passionate third-party to recommend action on an issue; this one is part of a case being brought by Minnesota and Washington states.)

Unlike Airbnb and other hot tech names, Uber did not initially stand up against Trump’s actions.

Uber’s reversal

On Saturday, Jan. 28, while travelers from seven countries were detained for hours at Kennedy Airport in New York City as a result of Trump’s ban, the New York taxi drivers’ union halted pickups as a form of protest. Uber did the opposite, announcing it would remove surge-pricing in order to give rides from the airport.