Civil rights activists call for a Target boycott after retailer backs
away from diversity programs
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[January 31, 2025] By
STEVE KARNOWSK
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Civil rights activists gathered outside the
headquarters of Target Corp. on Thursday to call for a national boycott
of the retailing giant over its decision to phase out its diversity,
equity and inclusion initiatives.
Target announced last Friday that it would join competitor Walmart and a
number of other prominent American brands in scaling back their DEI
initiatives, which have come under attack from conservatives and the new
White House of President Donald Trump.
Nekima Levy Armstrong, a veteran civil rights lawyer in Minneapolis and
founder of the Racial Justice Network, joined other local activists and
their supporters at a news conference to urge people to begin the
boycott on Saturday, the first day of Black History Month. Many of the
participants were regular Target shoppers until now, she said.
Levy Armstrong said they were “stunned” that Target, which increased its
commitment to building a more diverse workforce in the aftermath of the
police killing of George Floyd, a Black man, in Minneapolis in 2020,
backed away from its support of racial equity.
“We thought that they would hold the line. We thought that they would
continue to stand for the values that we all hold dear,” she said. "But
instead they acted cowardly, and they made the decision to bow down to
the Trump administration. Well, we are here today saying we will not bow
down. We will not step back, and we will not turn around.”
Jaylani Hussein, executive director of the Minnesota chapter of the
Council on Islamic-American Relations, said that as a company based in
the city where Floyd's murder sparked a national reckoning with racial
injustice, Target must be called out.
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“We here in Minneapolis today, the good people of the state, are saying
to our friends all over the country, ‘If you were moved to do something
good after the murder of George Floyd, it is time for you to stand up
and boycott Target,’” Hussein said.
The organizers of the boycott include local Black Lives Matter groups.
During the boycott announcement, some speakers cut up their distinctive
red Target charge cards, while others called on DEI supporters to shop
at Costco, which reaffirmed its commitment to DEI last week.
Despite the anger with Target, the news conference-turned-rally took on
a festive atmosphere, with a New Orleans-style brass band playing
protest songs like Bob Marley's “Get Up, Stand Up.” Participants circled
up for a prayer before the speeches began.
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A community advocate cuts a Target credit card during a news
conference outside Target Corporation's headquarters Thursday, Jan.
30, 2025, in Minneapolis, Minn. (AP Photo/Ellen Schmidt)
 Target, which long was viewed as a
strong advocate for the rights of Black and LGBTQ+ people, did not
immediately respond to a request for comment Thursday on the call
for a boycott. But in a memo to employees last week, Kiera
Fernandez, Target’s chief community impact and equity officer,
described the company's decision to retire its diversity goals as a
“next chapter” in the company’s human resource and customer
engagement strategy.
“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,” she wrote.
Levy Armstrong said Target has not reached out to her or other local
Black leaders. She said they expected more from Target, and now feel
like everything it had done in support of people of color was just
window dressing. The starting point for any conversation, she said,
would be for the company reverse its decision immediately.
“Target knows what its presence and its commitment to diversity,
equity and inclusion means to this community," Levy Armstrong said.
“So that is why we are focusing on Target first. But that does not
mean that those other businesses should not also be held
accountable. All of those businesses should be held accountable, and
they should not have access to our dollars.”
Speakers also called on long-established civil rights groups that
have benefited from Target’s philanthropy, such as the NAACP and the
Urban League, to join the opposition to Target’s decision. Levy
Armstrong and Hussein said they plan to partner with other national
organizations to get the word out about the boycott and to take
other steps they were not yet ready to share publicly.
Ever since calls for a boycott began circulating on social media,
the founders of several Black-owned businesses that sell their
products in Target stores or through the company's online platforms
have expressed concern that a broad boycott might hurt them. They
included the owners of hair care brands The Doux and Camille Rose,
and the cosmetics brand Lip Bar.
The Minneapolis organizers said Black consumers and their white
allies can continue to support those companies while cutting Target
out.
“We are asking people to go on their websites and buy directly from
those Black companies, because Target will not see a single one of
our Black dollars,” Levy Armstrong said.
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