Target ending DEI initiatives amid Trump's order on diversity programs

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By Reuters
January 24, 20253:12 PM ESTUpdated 43 min ago





People shopping on Black Friday in Wheaton, Maryland

People shop on Black Friday near a Target and the Westfield Wheaton mall in Wheaton Maryland, U.S., November 29, 2024. REUTERS/Leah Millis/File Photo


Jan 24 (Reuters) - Target (TGT.N)
, opens new tab is ending its diversity, equity and inclusion program along with other equity initiatives, the retailer said on Friday, becoming the latest U.S. firm to pull back these policies, meant to boost racial and ethnic representation at workplaces.
Earlier this week, President Donald Trump issued a sweeping executive order directing federal agencies to terminate diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) programs, encouraging private companies to do the same.

Companies have been focused on the diversity of their workforce for decades, but contemporary DEI initiatives took off after nationwide protests in 2020 over police shootings of unarmed Black people.
Over the last year, however, several major companies, including Walmart (WMT.N)
, opens new tab, Amazon (AMZN.O), opens new tab, and Meta (META.O)
, opens new tab, walked back their DEI policies in the face of public pressure and after the November election victory by Trump, who has long criticized DEI initiatives.

"Many years of data, insights, listening and learning have been shaping this next chapter in our strategy," Target's chief community impact and equity officer Kiera Fernandez said in a memo, adding that it was important to stay in step with the "evolving" external landscape.
Target said on Friday it was rolling back programs aimed at promoting racial equity, called the Racial Equity Action and Change (REACH) initiatives, this year.

In 2022, the company pledged it would invest more than $2 billion with Black-owned businesses by the end of 2025 as part of its REACH goals.
The initiative also included plans to add more than 500 Black-owned brands and a funding program from its in-house media company, Roundel, to increase exposure of diverse-owned brands through paid media.
The retailer added that it was changing its "Supplier Diversity" team to "Supplier Engagement" in a bid to better reflect "its inclusive global procurement process."

At a retail conference in New York this month, Target's CEO Brian Cornell said the company's growth over the past years came down to investing in people and creating a culture of care and growth.
The company cited an internal survey to showcase its people-led culture, saying it showed that "seven out of 10 people feel cared for as a person, not as an employee (of Target)."
"In retail, we have a chance to change lives," Cornell said at a keynote session at the National Retail Federation Conference.

Late last year, bigger rival Walmart said it was cutting some of its DEI initiatives too.
In contrast, on Thursday, Costco Wholesale COST.O shareholders voted strongly against a proposal requesting a report on the risks of maintaining its diversity and inclusion initiatives.
Minneapolis-based Target has landed in the cross hairs of conservative backlash in the past.
In 2023, Target pulled some LGBTQ-themed merchandise from stores, citing increased confrontations between shoppers and employees, and incidents of products being thrown on the floor.
The company has sold LGBTQ-related goods tied to Pride month for years but has faced growing criticism for carrying those products, including from conservative news outlets and Republican politicians, who have claimed certain items at its stores were marketed to children.
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Reporting by Savyata Mishra in Bengaluru and Siddharth Cavale in New York; Editing by Alan Barona
 
I was in the women's section of a Target a few weeks ago and every single bikini and underwear model had some sort of "special thing". Vitiligo, weird birth marks, massive and distracting afro, shaved head, the one or two I found that were just thin white women were just plain old ugly. I found one model who looked normal and then I noticed she was missing an arm and had a little stumpy growth at the elbow. WTF? I don't know about other women but when I look at a model or display, I want it to look attractive because then it makes me think "if I buy this, I will be attractive". I look at those models and think, who goes "wow I want to buy this dress because it will make me look just like the woman with the flipper hand!"?
 
I don't care, they sold chest binders to children. They can fuck off and die.
Yeah, this. I can laugh at a wheelchair-bound nigger Santa Claus figure, but selling youth chest binders and "tuck friendly" girls bathing suits is absolutely irredeemable. Since that happened I've never set foot in a Target and I never will again.
 
I was in the women's section of a Target a few weeks ago and every single bikini and underwear model had some sort of "special thing". Vitiligo, weird birth marks, massive and distracting afro, shaved head, the one or two I found that were just thin white women were just plain old ugly. I found one model who looked normal and then I noticed she was missing an arm and had a little stumpy growth at the elbow. WTF? I don't know about other women but when I look at a model or display, I want it to look attractive because then it makes me think "if I buy this, I will be attractive". I look at those models and think, who goes "wow I want to buy this dress because it will make me look just like the woman with the flipper hand!"?
Sure you weren't next to a dustborne ad? Where there glen beck ghosts?
ghosts.png
 
I was in the women's section of a Target a few weeks ago and every single bikini and underwear model had some sort of "special thing". Vitiligo, weird birth marks, massive and distracting afro, shaved head, the one or two I found that were just thin white women were just plain old ugly. I found one model who looked normal and then I noticed she was missing an arm and had a little stumpy growth at the elbow. WTF? I don't know about other women but when I look at a model or display, I want it to look attractive because then it makes me think "if I buy this, I will be attractive". I look at those models and think, who goes "wow I want to buy this dress because it will make me look just like the woman with the flipper hand!"?
Noticed Kohl's is doing the same thing....... trying oh-so-sneakily to get us to root for morbidly obese POC women in underwear..........
 
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