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Rubenstein Communications’ Steven Rubenstein, Ruder Finn’s Kathy Bloomgarden, Hiltzik Strategies’ Matthew Hiltzik, FINN Partners’ Peter Finn, and Global Strategy Group’s Jonathan Silvan are the PR leaders who signed the Partnership for New York City’s statement calling for civility in the wake of the attempted assassination of Donald Trump.
The Partnership said the attack should be a wake-up call for all. “We call upon our fellow Americans to reject violence it all its forms and pledge to uphold the basic standards of civility and respect for our differences in the workplace, in the political arena, and in our society as a whole,” reads the statement.
News Corp's CEO Robert Thomson, Conde Nast's Roger Lynch, US News & World Report's Eric Gertler, Vox Media's Pamela Wasserstein, and Hearst's Steven Swartz are the media representatives who joined the call for civility.


Too many executives view public affairs as a technical task. They think that if their policy is strong, their facts are correct, and their lawyers are ready, the outcome will naturally follow. That’s a dangerous misconception.
A majority of Americans (52 percent) say president Trump launched the invasion of Iran in part to distract voters from the Jeffrey Epstein sex scandal. Forty percent disagree, according to Drop Site/Zeteo/Data for Progress survey conducted March 6-8.

Cornerstone Government Affairs has inked a $25K monthly pact with Qatar to advance the relationship of the Arab state and the US.



