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Target is facing growing backlash and declining sales as a national boycott continues, intensified by a private meeting with ...
Target is under more pressure than companies like Walmart, John Deere or Tractor Supply, because Target went further in its DEI efforts, and it has a more progressive base of customers than those ...
Black faith leaders are organizing protests at Target stores nationwide on May 25th, the anniversary of George Floyd's murder. The protests aim to pressure Target to reinstate diversity, equity ...
The People's Union USA is asking consumers to once again boycott Target. Between June 3-9, the activist group, led by John Schwarz, is calling for people to not shop at the retail chain, instead ...
Target boycott leaders plan protests on anniversary of George Floyd's murder A second Amazon boycott is happening May 6 to 12. Find out why. Shoppers continue business boycotts.
Another Target boycott starts this week amid the retailer's stance on DEI initiatives. Here's how long it lasts, what it could look like in Ohio.
Target is just one of the companies now walking a tightrope, balancing the demands of President Donald Trump to end diversity efforts with what customers might want from the corporations they do ...
Black faith leaders are organizing protests at Target stores nationwide on May 25th, the anniversary of George Floyd's murder. The protests aim to pressure Target to reinstate diversity, equity ...
Target is one of dozens of Fortune 500 companies that have backtracked on DEI in response to conservative court decisions, pressure from right-wing activists and legal groups, and, more recently ...
Black faith leaders are organizing protests at Target stores nationwide on May 25th, the anniversary of George Floyd's murder. The protests aim to pressure Target to reinstate diversity, equity ...
The pressure is particularly acute at companies like Target, that had previously championed diversity in hiring and in sourcing their products. Already, Bryant said, Target has ceded to one demand.
Target CEO Brian Cornell met with civil rights leader Rev. Al Sharpton on April 17 to discuss the boycotts. Sharpton called the meeting "constructive and candid" and said he would "inform our ...