08/06/2025 / By Laura Harris
Adrian Mardell, the longtime Jaguar Land Rover executive who led the company’s dramatic rebranding as simply “JLR,” is stepping down after two years of being a CEO and more than three decades at the automaker.
Mardell, who joined the company in 1990, became chief financial officer in 2018 and was appointed CEO in 2023 following the resignation of Thierry Bollore. Under his leadership, JLR clawed back profitability after a turbulent stretch during the Wuhan coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic and began a far-reaching transformation of its brand identity and business strategy.
His tenure marked a departure from Jaguar Land Rover’s traditional structure. Mardell spearheaded a plan to market Range Rover, Defender and Discovery as distinct brands under the simplified JLR umbrella, to align the company with premium automakers that treat nameplates like Porsche or Mercedes-Benz sub-brands.
Yet Mardell’s retirement comes as JLR faces stiff headwinds.
Jaguar, once a pillar of British automotive heritage, has pivoted toward becoming a high-end electric vehicle brand. The company ceased production of all existing Jaguar models last year and teased a new lineup of EVs expected to start above $100,000. The relaunch has been met with skepticism, with its accompanying marketing campaign widely ridiculed and a broader luxury EV market cooling amid consumer hesitation and high costs.
Meanwhile, the Land Rover side of the business is on firmer ground. Range Rover and Defender models remain strong sellers and key sources of profit. Still, challenges loom there as well: The first electric Range Rover has been delayed until next year amid reports of soft demand, raising questions about JLR’s electric future.
Geopolitical concerns are also weighing on the company’s global strategy. A U.S. tariff structure places a 10 percent duty on the first 100,000 U.K.-built vehicles exported annually, relatively low, but most Defender and Discovery models are made in Slovakia, making them subject to a 15 percent tariff. Such hurdles add complexity to JLR’s already ambitious restructuring efforts.
Despite all this upheaval, Mardell’s retirement leaves JLR without a named successor.
JLR has become a prominent example of “woke suicide.”
Over the past decade, the company attempted to pivot toward women and younger, more progressive audiences. In doing so, Jaguar embraced diversity marketing, featuring trans and androgynous models in campaigns designed to appeal to Millennials and Gen Z consumers.
However, this rebranding failed spectacularly, culminating in a 97 percent drop in sales. The strategy faltered because it aimed luxury products at an audience with minimal purchasing power, primarily online activists lacking financial means. Ultimately, companies like Jaguar miscalculated the influence and size of the woke demographic, falling victim to their own marketing illusions and activist-driven narratives. (Related: Get woke, go broke: Jaguar sales plunge 97.5% amid controversial rebrand.)
In turn, Tyler Durden concluded in his article for Zero Hedge that JLR, like many other “woke” companies, “hit a wall.”
“Progressive companies have hit a wall they did not expect: They did not consider the fact that they can bombard the public with propaganda but they can’t force the public to buy their products. And, with government subsidies drying up, they must now rely solely on consumers to keep them financially afloat. Wokeness is over, and the free market wins again,” Durden wrote.
Visit Wokies.news for more stories related to the woke agenda.
Watch Benny Johnson commenting on Jaguar’s woke ad and noting how the car brand went the same path as Bud Light.
This video is from the Sanivan channel on Brighteon.com.
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