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Trump says Nike pays 'a lot of rent' in an interview about the new Colin Kaepernick ad
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Trump says Nike pays 'a lot of rent' in an interview about the new Colin Kaepernick ad


 

President Donald Trump is speaking out about Nike's new Colin Kaepernick ad. And, he apparently wants people to know that the sportswear brand is paying the Trump Organization a lot of money for rent. 

On Monday, news broke that Colin Kaepernick is starring in a new Nike ad. Kaepernick was the first NFL player to kneel during the national anthem before games in 2016 to protest racial inequality and police brutality. Some on the right, including Trump, saw the protest as disrespectful to the military, with Trump calling for players who protested to be fired. 

In an interview with The Daily Caller on Tuesday, Trump said he thought that Nike was sending a "terrible message" with the ad, but that Nike was free to make the decision. 

Trump was also quick to mention his own business relationship with Nike. 

"Nike is a tenant of mine. They pay a lot of rent," Trump said. 

Nike is, in fact, the Trump Organization's biggest tenant in a single space, with the company leasing 65,000 square feet of space on East 57th Street for Niketown. 

But Trump's quote raised some eyebrows. The president has been a vocal critic of players' protests, with his influence reportedly contributing to the NFL's and team owners' decision to announce a policy that would force players to either stand for the anthem or stay in the locker room while it is being played. That policy has been on hold since the NFL Players Association filed a grievance in July, The Washington Post reported.

As a result, some wondered whether Trump tempered his response to Nike's Kaepernick ad simply because the company is paying rent to the Trump Organization. 

While Trump's business relationship with Nike may have factored into his response, Nike announced in 2017 that it was planning on closing its store in the space it rents from the Trump Organization. The decision comes as Nike prepares for the 2019 opening of its new store, just five blocks down Fifth Avenue. Niketown closed in March.

Nike's move seems to be predominantly motivated by a change in its strategy, which is now focused on more experimental and modern conveniences that the aging store couldn't provide. However, in 2017, two anonymous Nike employees told Forbes that while space issues at Niketown were the biggest reason for the move, the association with Trump's brand was only "a factor, to some degree."