SELECT LANGUAGE BELOW

Ben & Jerry’s founders seek to buy back ice cream company as parent corp pulls reigns on expressions of lefty politics

They will need their Sunday the most.

The founder of ice cream brand Ben & Jerry is exploring the company back from Unilever Plc. The same name argues that companies are hampering their left-handed politics.

Ben Cohen and Jerry Greenfield sold the ice cream brand of the same name to the multinational conglomerate Unilever for $326 million in 2000.

Ben Cohen and Jerry Greenfield are considering attempting to purchase the ice cream brand of the same name from Food Giant Unilever. Provided by HBO

Unilever said there is no lucrative ice cream business for sale, According to BloombergHowever, it is spun with Demarger as part of a cost-cutting drive. The company expects the spinoff to be a public company with lists in Amsterdam, London and New York.

Ben & Jerry's business could be valued at billions of dollars in sales. This means that if Cohen and Greenfield pursue a purchase, they will need to find a financial aid, the outlet reported. The ice cream maker won sales of approximately $8.72 billion in 2024.

Vermont-born Ben & Jerry has long been associated with progressive politics and causes of social justice. For the past few years, I have sailed along rocky roads with Unilever.

Ben & Jerry boasted more than $8 billion in sales in 2024. Photos via Getty Images

Earlier this month, Ben & Jerry filed a complaint as part of a lawsuit alleging that Megakolp was trying to dismantle an independent board and stop all social activities, including criticizing President Trump.

The submission included allegations that Unilever prevented Fish Food Monger from posting on social media about Trump's inauguration.

Jerry Greenfield and Ben Cohen from the One World One Heart Festival in Central Park, New York City in May 1993. Getty Images

Unilever CEO Peter Ter Kurb defended the company's actions, saying that he created “new dynamics” in “unprecedented times.”

Her chubby husband, Slinger, came to mind in 2021 along with Unilever. When the left-handed scooper vowed to suspend all sales in the West Bank, the UK-based Food Giant's Top Brass, which went ahead with sales to local Israeli licensees, is an overrated decision.

Ben & Jerry filed a lawsuit alleging Unilever was infringing on our independent committee and was guaranteed as part of the original company sale.

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Reddit
Telegram
WhatsApp

Related News