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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsWhy Target is under fire over Minnesota ICE raids
Target and other major Minnesota businesses are facing rising discontent from staff, as workers fear the Trump administration's immigration crackdown puts them at risk on the job.
Employees are pushing firms to provide clearer guidance about how to respond if Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers arrive at their worksites - and asking them to do more to limit agents' access to stores and parking lots.
The pressures have been particularly acute at Target, a national name and one of the state's flagship employers, after the detention of two workers inside one of its suburban Minneapolis stores last month.
In the aftermath, more than 300 staff signed an internal letter, seen by the BBC, urging executives to speak up, and take steps to keep ICE officers off Target properties.
Target cashier Sandra Macmillan, 71, said she resigned last month after seeing the videos, which showed masked agents pinning the two employees to the ground in the store's entryway before pushing them into a vehicle, while one shouted: "I'm literally a US citizen".
"I looked online and saw no response from Target," said Macmillan, who had worked for the company in Texas since 2021, calling it "the last straw". "There was no acknowledgement whatsoever."
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c4g4y4gwjpeo
Target wants to remain a good corporate (read" Trumpian) citizen. But what will they do when it all comes crashing down? Zebras din;t automatically become giraffes.
cbabe
(6,393 posts)One year later, Target still reeling from boycotts
by Megan Sayles AFRO Staff Writer
January 25, 2026
Its been almost a year since Georgia Pastor Jamal Bryants Lenten Target fast began. The movement, started in March 2025, was spurred by the retailers decision to axe their equity, diversity and inclusion efforts last January just days after the 47th president issued an executive order banning the same kind of initiatives in the federal government.
The roughly $12.5 billion drop in market value in early 2025, along with a nearly 30 percent fall in stock during the 40-day Target fast boycott led by Dr. Jamal Bryant, came on top of years of flat sales and weaker performance compared with peer firms, like Walmart, Costco, Aldi and T.J. Maxx.
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(Target went maga long ago.)
Jilly_in_VA
(14,075 posts)Probably 3-4 years, anyway. Plan to keep it that way. Let's run them out of business.