Starbucks Gun Stance: Do You Support Chain's New Stand On Weapons?

Starbucks has announced a new policy asking gun owners to “no longer bring firearms into our stores or outdoor seating areas,” a position that immediately began kicking up controversy for the coffee giant.

The new policy is, in effect, a soft ban as it will not be enforced. In an open letter posted on the company’s website, Chief Executive Howard Schultz described the new policy as a request intended to make patrons comfortable. He said he did not want employees, such as baristas making your mocha, to confront armed customers. That “is not a role I am comfortable asking Starbucks partners to take on,” he said. (The company refers to employees as partners.)

Schultz’s letter sought to speak directly to gun owners: “For those who champion ‘open carry,’ please respect that Starbucks stores are places where everyone should feel relaxed and comfortable. The presence of a weapon in our stores is unsettling and upsetting for many of our customers.”

Advertisement

PHOTOS: How to find L.A.’s Cronut-wannabes, map included

The reaction to Schultz’s letter was exactly what you’d expect -- sharply divided down the middle between people who believe weapons have no place in a public coffee shop, and those who believe Starbucks has no business wading into gun issues.

Taking the temperature on Twitter, one user tweeted, “I support this policy. Thank you.” Another tweeted, “Starbucks coffee now comes with a bitter aftertaste of SECOND-AMENDMENT DESTROYING TYRANNY”

Advertisement

The division was apparent even on Starbucks’ own website.

“If Starbucks doesn’t like the second amendment then I can choose not to drink their coffee. Period,” one person posted in a comment on the coffee chain’s website. But another applauded Starbucks and suggested the coffee chain is wisely channeling into customer sentiment: “You are not pushing customers away, you are gaining more customers, trust me majority of people in this country want some gun control.”

Schultz letter says the new policy comes as Starbucks stores and employees have been “thrust unwillingly into the middle of this debate.”

He said Starbucks’ long-standing approach has been to abide by local gun laws, and he added that he believes gun policy is an issue best left to government and law enforcement.

However, he said he felt compelled to take a public position on the issue because some pro-gun activists have used Starbucks outlets to host events that “disingenuously portray Starbucks as a champion of “open carry.’” He added: “To be clear: We do not want these events in our stores.”

He went on: “For these reasons, today we are respectfully requesting that customers no longer bring firearms into our stores or outdoor seating areas -- even in states where ‘open carry’ is permitted -- unless they are authorized law enforcement personnel.”

What do you think about Starbucks’ new gun stance?

ALSO:

PHOTOS: 11 brownies and bar cookies

Advertisement

PHOTOS: Food mash-ups: 10 crazy hybrids

THE JUICE MAP: 45 cold-pressed juice bars in L.A.

More to Read

  • Cypress Park, CA - December 24: Starbucks barista Hicell Lopez holds a sign as workers picket at a store in the Cypress Park area of Los Angeles, expanding a nationwide strike today against the coffee giant marking the fourth day of walkoffs at various locations around the country, forcing more than 60 stores to temporarily close on Tuesday, Dec. 24, 2024 in Cypress Park, CA. (Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times)

    Starbucks union launches Red Cup Day strike at dozens of stores — including 10 in California

    Nov. 13, 2025
  • LONG BEAC6, CALIF. - DEC. 15, 2022. Striking Starbucks workers appeal to passing motorists at a Starbucks retail outlet in Long Beach on Friday, Dec. 16, 2022. About 100 Starbucks stores across America will be on strike for the next three days as the union attempts to turn up the pressure in its year-long battle with the coffee retailer. (Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times)

    Unionized Starbucks baristas prepared to go on strike next week amid long contract standoff

    Nov. 5, 2025
  • LONG BEAC6, CALIF. - DEC. 15, 2022. Striking Starbucks workers appeal to passing motorists at a Starbucks retail outlet in Long Beach on Friday, Dec. 16, 2022. About 100 Starbucks stores across America will be on strike for the next three days as the union attempts to turn up the pressure in its year-long battle with the coffee retailer. (Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times)

    Unionized baristas want Olympics to drop Starbucks as its ‘official coffee partner’

    Oct. 20, 2025

Tag » Coffee Companies That Support 2a