The Mercury News

Agency says state police won’t purchase Nike merchandis­e

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JACKSON, MISS. >> Mississipp­i’s public safety commission­er disclosed Saturday that state police will no longer buy Nike products, saying the athletic apparel maker is unpatrioti­c and fails to support those in uniform.

“As commission­er of the Department of Public Safety, I will not support vendors who do not support law enforcemen­t and our military,” Commission­er Marshall Fisher said in a statement Saturday.

It wasn’t clear how much gear the state police agency bought from Nike or if it purchased directly from the athletic apparel maker. Department spokesman Warren Strain said the agency has bought shoes and shirts from the company, as well as tactical training uniforms.

Mississipp­i’s Republican establishm­ent is jumping to support the cause, with Gov. Phil Bryant lauding his appointee’s decision.

“I support the commission­er’s decision,” Bryant said in a statement.

The governor said the commission­er has the right to choose vendors his department does business with, “and it’s not going to be a company that pays an individual who has slandered our fine men and women in law enforcemen­t.”

Nike didn’t respond to a phone call and an email seeking comment Saturday. Online news organizati­on Mississipp­i Today first reported the story Friday.

It’s the latest dust-up following Oregonbase­d Nike’s decision to use former San Francisco 49ers quarterbac­k Colin Kaepernick in an ad campaign. Kaepernick began kneeling during the national anthem at football games in 2016 to protest police brutality and social injustice.

Fisher’s move is drawing criticism from the Mississipp­i chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union and Democratic state lawmakers.

“These are the people that are representi­ng all Mississipp­ians,” the ACLU chapter said in a statement posted Saturday on Twitter. “These are the people that are creating policy that impact all of our lives. These are the people that took an oath to uphold the Constituti­on. Yet they refuse to understand what equality, justice, and accountabi­lity means. This petty decision is just another show of racism, discrimina­tion, stupidity, inequity, and divisive politics.”

Other Republican politician­s in Mississipp­i appear to see political advantage in excoriatin­g Nike. The campaign of Lt. Gov. Tate Reeves, who plans to run for governor in 2019, sent out a statement Wednesday saying Kaepernick’s acts are not a sacrifice — though that’s how the Nike ad describes them.

“By supporting the NFL protests, Nike is making it clear that they would rather stand with those who show contempt for our country over those who defend it,” Reeves said.

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