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Bank of America Corp. wouldn’t comment directly on its plans, but spokesman Larry DiRita said it typically supports a convention if it has significant links to the community, and that Cleveland and Philadelphia, the site of the 2016 Democratic convention, “are both cities where we have a healthy community presence.”

With just over a month to go before the doors open at the Quicken Loans Arena in Cleveland, some companies that have contributed to past events remain coy about their plans for this year. These include some of the largest companies targeted by the activist campaign, including Apple Inc., Wal-Mart Stores Inc., Amazon.com Inc., Xerox Corp., and Adobe Systems Inc. All of these companies declined to comment on their plans or didn’t return calls and e-mails.

“If any of their employees walked inside their jobs and said the things Donald Trump is saying on the campaign trail, in front of countless cameras and journalists, they would be fired,” said Rashad Robinson of ColorOfChange PAC, one of the groups leading the activist campaign. “Corporations play a powerful role in sending a message to everyday people about what’s acceptable in the public space. This is not a business- as-usual convention.”

There was a lull in new commitments to the convention around the time that Trump’s last Republican rivals dropped out of the running, according to Emily Lauer, a spokeswoman for the Cleveland host committee. One company reneged on a previous commitment, but its decision was apparently unrelated to Trump, she said. Just in the past week or two, commitments have picked back up as the convention start date approaches.