Pastor's Decision to End Target Boycott Sparks Fierce Backlash

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Pastor's Decision to End Target Boycott Sparks Fierce Backlash Target CorporationBATS:TGTKalaGhaziWhen Atlanta-based pastor Jamal Harrison Bryant announced he was calling off his yearlong boycott of Target, the response was swift and explosive—not from the retail giant, but from the very communities he claimed to represent. What was intended as a gesture of reconciliation instead ignited a firestorm of criticism, exposing deep fractures within the movement protesting Target's retreat from diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) initiatives. During a hastily organized news conference held outside Target's corporate headquarters in Minneapolis on March 11, grassroots activists took turns denouncing Bryant's unilateral decision. Standing before a gathering of reporters and supporters, they made their position clear: the nationwide boycott sparked by Target's rollback of DEI policies was not his to end. The backlash quickly spread to social media, where Target shoppers—particularly Black women—flooded Bryant's Instagram page with angry comments, asserting that he did not speak for them and accusing him of abandoning the cause without achieving meaningful concessions from the company. Just two days later, Bryant addressed the controversy on his podcast, "Let's Be Clear," offering a candid admission that he had "misread the room." In a tone of humility, he acknowledged the disconnect between his leadership and the grassroots movement. "I was reading from a different sheet of music," Bryant explained, acknowledging that he had failed to grasp the depth of community sentiment. "I wanted to apologize to you for being a leader that was out of touch with what it is that the community ... were demanding." His apology, while striking, did little to quell the broader debate over who holds the authority to call off a movement built on collective action. The original wave of boycotts erupted shortly after Target announced it was dismantling its DEI policies in the wake of President Donald Trump's return to office. From church pulpits to community meetings to social media campaigns, the company's decision was widely condemned as a profound betrayal—particularly by Black Americans who had long been among Target's most loyal and influential customer bases. For years, Black shoppers had supported the retailer not only through their spending but also by championing its earlier commitments to racial equity and inclusive representation. The abrupt policy reversal was seen by many as a dismissal of that loyalty. While the national fervor surrounding the boycott had somewhat subsided in the months following Target's announcement, Bryant's controversial attempt to end it thrust the movement back into the public spotlight, reigniting debates about corporate accountability and the sustainability of consumer activism. At the center of the ongoing resistance are several prominent Minnesota-based activists who launched a separate boycott effort in February 2025. Nekima Levy Armstrong, a Minneapolis civil rights attorney and founder of the Racial Justice Network, joined forces with Monique Cullars-Doty, cofounder of Black Lives Matter Minnesota, and Jaylani Hussein, executive director of the Minnesota chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR-Minnesota). Together, they have maintained that the boycott remains in full effect and will continue until Target reverses its DEI rollback. In a statement to USA TODAY, Armstrong articulated the movement's uncompromising stance, framing the boycott as a matter of principle and self-determination. "Target's refusal to restore DEI commitments makes it clear: The company is willing to lose Black consumers and women—many already gone—in order to appease its MAGA customer base," Armstrong said. She characterized Target's decision as a deliberate alignment with the Trump administration's broader policy agenda, adding, "Target made a conscious choice to align with the Trump Administration. We the people made a conscious choice to take our dollars elsewhere." For Armstrong and her allies, the boycott is not merely an economic strategy but a statement of collective dignity and political agency. That sentiment was echoed by Nina Turner, former Ohio state senator and president of the advocacy organization We Are Somebody. Turner's group had called for a nationwide boycott just one day after Target announced its DEI rollback, and she made it clear that her organization has no intention of backing down. In Turner's view, the fight extends beyond Target itself, serving as a litmus test for corporate accountability in an era of shifting political winds. She and her allies argue that prematurely ending the boycott without securing concrete commitments from the company would set a dangerous precedent, signaling to other corporations that they can abandon DEI commitments without facing sustained consequences. The controversy surrounding Bryant's announcement has underscored a broader tension within social justice movements: the question of who speaks for a community and how grassroots activism can maintain cohesion in the absence of centralized leadership. While Bryant framed his decision as an act of strategic discernment after a year of pressure, his critics saw it as an overreach that undermined a movement built on decentralized, collective resolve. The episode has also highlighted the enduring power of Black women as both economic forces and political organizers, with many emerging as vocal leaders in sustaining the boycott. As the debate continues, Target remains at the center of a national conversation about corporate responsibility, racial equity, and the limits of consumer activism. Whether the boycott will regain the momentum it once had—or whether the internal divisions exposed by Bryant's announcement will weaken the movement—remains an open question. What is clear, however, is that for a significant segment of activists and shoppers, the fight is far from over.