The Guardian (USA)

McDonald's chief executive out over relationsh­ip with employee

- Martin Pengelly and agencies

McDonald’s chief executive officer, Steve Easterbroo­k, has left the fast food giant after violating company policy by engaging in a consensual relationsh­ip with an employee, the corporatio­n said on Sunday.

McDonald’s said the British-born former president and chief executive demonstrat­ed poor judgment. The company forbids managers from having romantic relationsh­ips with direct or indirect employees.

In an email to staff, Easterbroo­k acknowledg­ed the relationsh­ip and said it was a mistake. “Given the values of the company, I agree with the board that it is time for me to move on,” Easterbroo­k said in the email.

McDonald’s directors voted on Easterbroo­k’s departure on Friday, after conducting a review. Details of his separation package will be released on Monday in a federal filing, according to a company spokespers­on.

According to the Wall Street Journal, Easterbroo­k’s compensati­on rose with McDonald’s share price and “peaked in 2017 at a total of $21.8m including $9.1m in incentive-based pay. He received $15.9m in total compensati­on last year”.

McDonald’s is planning to file its third-quarter earnings report on Tuesday. Two weeks ago, the fast food chain reported a 2% drop in net income for the third quarter as it spent heavily on store re-modelling and expanded its delivery service. The company’s share price has dropped 7.5% since, though it is still up 9.2% for the year.

In a news release on Sunday, the company said the leadership transition was unrelated to the company’s operationa­l or financial performanc­e.

Easterbroo­k, 52, was born in Watford and joined the company in 1993.

He rose to lead the British branch in 2006, then became president of its northern European operation, overseeing 1,800 restaurant­s.

He left the company in 2011, to become chief executive of Pizza Express and later Wagamama. In June 2013 he joined McDonald’s head office in Illinois as global chief brand officer. He became chief executive in 2015.

A divorced father of three, he also has a seat on the board of Walmart and is a “CEO Champion for Change” for Catalyst, a nonprofit which seeks “to build workplaces that work for women”.

On Sunday, the McDonald’s board of directors named Chris Kempczinsk­i, formerly president of McDonald’s USA, as its new president and chief executive.

Kempczinsk­i joined McDonald’s in 2015. He was responsibl­e for approximat­ely 14,000 restaurant­s in the US, was instrument­al in the developmen­t of the strategic plan and oversaw the most comprehens­ive transforma­tion of the US business in McDonald’s history, Enrique Hernandez, chairman of the board, said in a statement.

“Steve brought me into McDonald’s and he was a patient and helpful mentor,” Kempczinsk­i said of Easterbroo­k, thanking him for his contributi­ons.

Speaking to the Journal, Kempczinsk­i said: “There isn’t going to be some radical, strategic shift. The plan is working.”

 ?? Photograph: Richard Drew/AP ?? Steve Easterbroo­k is interviewe­d at the New York Stock Exchange, in 2017.
Photograph: Richard Drew/AP Steve Easterbroo­k is interviewe­d at the New York Stock Exchange, in 2017.

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