
Goya Foods CEO Bob Unanue speaks prior to President Donald Trump signing an Executive Order on the White House Hispanic Prosperity Initiative at the White House, on July 9. Unanue said he would not apologize for his positive remarks toward the president, and called demands for a boycott of his company "suppression of speech."
"It is suppression of speech.... You're allowed to talk good or to praise one president, but you're not allowed, when I was called to be part of this commission, to aid in economic and educational prosperity, and you make a positive comment, and all of a sudden it is not acceptable," Robert Unanue, the CEO at Goya, said during an appearance on Fox News' Fox & Friends.
Unanue, who is of Spanish and Puerto Rican descent, was invited by Trump to the White House to watch as the president signed an executive order for the Hispanic Prosperity Initiative, which is a commission tasked with improving "access by Hispanic Americans to educational and economic opportunities," according to the order.
The Goya CEO was among several elected officials and business leaders present in the Rose Garden for the signing, and he said, "We are all truly blessed...to have a leader like President Trump who is a builder.














Comment: See also: