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[January 25, 2025] By
ANNE D'INNOCENZIO
NEW YORK (AP) — Discount store chain Target said Friday that it would
join rival Walmart and a number of other prominent American brands in
scaling back diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives that have come
under attack from conservative activists and, as of this week, the White
House.
The Minneapolis-based retailer said the changes to its “Belonging at the
Bullseye” strategy would include ending a program it established to help
Black employees build meaningful careers, improve the experience of
Black shoppers and to promote Black-owned businesses following the
police killing of George Floyd in 2020.
Target, which operates nearly 2,000 stores nationwide and employs more
than 400,000 people, said it already had planned to end the racial
program this year. The company said Friday that it also would conclude
the diversity, equity and inclusion, or DEI, goals it previously set in
three-year cycles.
The goals included hiring and promoting more women and members of racial
minority groups, and recruiting more diverse suppliers, including
businesses owned by people of color, women, LGBTQ+ people, veterans and
people with disabilities.
Target has long been a fierce corporate advocate for the rights of Black
and LGBTQ+ people. In a memo to employees, Kiera Fernandez, Target’s
chief community impact and equity officer, described the DEI decisions
as a “next chapter” in the company's decades-long process to create
“inclusive work and guest environments that welcome all.”
“Many years of data, insights, listening and learning have been shaping
this next chapter in our strategy,” Fernandez wrote in the memo, which
Target shared Friday. “And as a retailer that serves millions of
consumers every day, we understand the importance of staying in step
with the evolving external landscape, now and in the future.”
![](http://archives.lincolndailynews.com/2025/Jan/25/images/ads/current/ldn_booksda_CHASSKAREN_010924.png)
There's no doubt the U.S. civil rights landscape has undergone a massive
transformation in the five years since much of corporate America adopted
DEI goals in response to the Black Lives Matter protests that followed
Floyd's death in Minneapolis.
A 2023 U.S. Supreme Court decision that outlawed affirmative action in
college admissions emboldened conservative groups to bring or threaten
lawsuits targeting corporate initiatives such as employee resource
groups and hiring practices that prioritize historically marginalized
groups.
Walmart, McDonald’s, Ford, Harley-Davison and John Deere are among the
well-known consumer brands that reduced or phased out their DEI
commitments in recent months.
President Donald Trump this week signaled his administration's agreement
with conservatives who argue that policies designed to increase minority
representation by considering factors such as race, gender and sexual
orientation are unconstitutional.
![](http://archives.lincolndailynews.com/2025/Jan/25/images/ads/current/ldn_smallsda_BUSINESSMAG_2023.png)
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![](../images/012525PIX/busine82.jpg)
A person heads into a Target store Thursday, Jan. 11, 2024, in
Lakewood, Colo. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski, File)
![](http://archives.lincolndailynews.com/2025/Jan/25/images/ads/current/graue_lda_EQUINOX5112_011325.jpg) On his first day in office, Trump
signed an executive order aimed at ending DEI programs across the
federal government. The order calls for revoking all DEI mandates,
policies, preferences and activities, along with the review and
revision of existing employment practices, union contracts, and
training policies or programs.
Still, some prominent companies have resisted public pressure to
retreat from their diversity plans. On Thursday, Costco shareholders
rejected a proposal urging the wholesale club operator to evaluate
any risks posed by its diversity, equity and inclusion practices.
According to preliminary results shared by Costco executives, more
than 98% of shares voted against the proposal submitted by a
conservative think tank based in Washington. Costco’s board of
directors had recommended a no vote.
Apple's board and the CEO of JPMorgan bank also have expressed a
commitment to preserving their companies' DEI activities.
Unlike some of the companies retooling or retiring their diversity
initiatives, Target's work to build a more inclusive workforce
predated 2020, and the company also was long seen as a trailblazer
with respect to LGBTQ+ inclusion.
But the employee memo shared Friday said Target no longer would
participate in surveys designed to gauge the effectiveness of its
actions, including an annual index compiled by the Human Rights
Campaign, a national LGBTQ+ rights organization. Target said it
would further evaluate corporate partnerships to ensure they’re
connected directly to business objectives, but declined to share
details.
Getting corporations to withdraw from the Human Rights Campaign's
Corporate Equality Index and to stop sponsoring Pride activities
have been goals of DEI opponents.
Steering clear of a backlash from conservative customers and
organizations is something that Target has tried to navigate for a
while. As transgender rights became a more prominent issue in 2016,
the company declared that “inclusivity is a core belief at Target”
and said it supported transgender employees and customers using
whichever restroom or fitting room “corresponds with their gender
identity.”
But after some customers threatened to boycott Target stores, the
company said that more stores would make available a single-toilet
bathroom with a door that could be locked.
In 2023, Target removed some of its Pride Month merchandise after
online complaints and in-store confrontations that the retailer said
threatened employees’ well-being. The company decided last year not
to stock Pride Month products at every U.S. store.
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