Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Penzeys blasts Trump in Facebook ad

- Bill Glauber

Penzeys Spices is throwing more than a dash of salt into the battle over impeaching President Donald Trump.

The Wauwatosa-based firm has spent $92,000 on a sponsored pro-impeachmen­t post on Facebook, the website AXIOS reported Wednesday.

Bill Penzey, chief executive of the spice company and a noted critic of the president, wrote in the Oct. 3 post: “The president’s Ukraine scandal is the big one. I get that it can be hard to believe any scandal will stick, but this one is different. This one is going to show you, from its very beginning, our nation has been built up from its bedrock to be ready for any political party that would crown their leader king.”

According to data compiled by Bully Pulpit Interactiv­e, Penzeys’ Facebook ad spend on impeachmen­t was second behind President Donald Trump’s campaign, which spent $729,000 in the Sept. 29-Oct. 5 period.

Penzeys spent more on impeachmen­t ads than Democratic presidenti­al candidates Tom Steyer ($86,000) and Elizabeth Warren ($20,000).

This isn’t the first time Penzeys ad spending on Facebook has been counted as political. Since May 2018, the firm has spent nearly $2.4 million on “ads about social issues, elections or politics,” according to Facebook Ad Library.

In an interview with the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, Penzey said: “At some point Facebook decided all of our ads are political. Anything that addresses values is political in their mind. So our belief that cooking is caring about others and the good things that happen when you care about others, that’s a political belief.”

Penzey said the idea for the post grew out of a “couple of emails” he sent to “our regular customers” talking about the current political issues.

“The overwhelmi­ng response to it made me realize I had to do a Facebook version of this,” he said. “This one kind of caught the wind.”

Penzey said the ad has been “hugely successful.”

“I’ve placed a couple of hundred Facebook ads,” he said. “This one has eclipsed our previous best ever.”

Penzey hasn’t been shy about sharing his political thoughts. In November 2016, he blasted then-President-elect Trump and his supporters, igniting a firestorm of criticism.

Wading into political controvers­y hasn’t hurt business, he said.

“If you’re a business and have a voice and people know your voice, now is a good time to use it,” he said.

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