National Post

Boycott over Trump orders gains momentum

- Aleksandra Sagan

• Caroline Starr stopped shopping at Hudson’s Bay stores several months ago when she first heard of an online campaign to boycott companies that support then-Republican U.S. presidenti­al nominee Donald Trump and his family’s brand.

But when the president announced his latest executive order last week — a 90- day ban preventing citizens from seven predominan­tly Muslim countries from entering the U.S. — she started to encourage others to join her “Baycotting” via Facebook.

“This doesn’t reflect … the Canada I feel a part of,” she says, adding that she believes the retailer owes consumers an explanatio­n after the travel ban.

“Why are we continuing to support this?”

More shoppers, including those in Canada, are joining a campaign to push back against Trump’s divisive rhetoric and policies with their wallets, taking aim at a growing hit list of companies that support the first family’s business ventures.

Hudson’s Bay Co. operates several retailers on the Grab Your Wallet list, including Hudson’s Bay and Saks Off 5th, which all sell some of the Trump family members’ products.

HBC spokeswoma­n Tiff any Bourre did not say whether the boycott has affected sales, but said the company respects customers’ rights to choose the brands that work for them and those choices inform its decisions.

The campaign encourages people to boycott dozens of retailers selling Donald or Ivanka Trump’s products, and dozens more that are owned by the family or connected to them through fundraisin­g support or other means.

Doug Stephens, founder of Retail Prophet, a Torontobas­ed retail advisory, said the campaign forces retailers into a position where they must become political.

“They have to respond,” he says. “One way or the other.”

But the campaign has also given rise to an impassione­d response from another camp: Trump supporters who are waging a backlash, promising to spend more money on Trump products and boycott any retailers that stop selling them.

“As is the case with most things Trump, it’s a very polarizing issue,” Stephens says.

Kirsten Hurd says she was once a loyal Hudson’s Bay shopper, but started avoiding the stores a few months ago.

“I just don’t think that HBC should be profiting off of that family,” she says.

“I don’t think that that family stands for anything that … most Canadians agree with.”

Starr and Hurd both want the company to pull the products from store shelves and issue an explanatio­n.

To date, the Grab Your Wallet campaign has removed seven companies from its list with plans to remove one more this month. According to the campaign website, the Honest Company, a U. S. consumer goods company, committed to no longer sponsor future seasons of The Apprentice.

 ?? ANDREW HARNIK / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A worker cleans the windows of the Ivanka Trump Collection in the lobby of Trump Tower in New York. More shoppers, even those in Canada, are joining a campaign to push back against Trump’s divisive rhetoric and policies.
ANDREW HARNIK / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A worker cleans the windows of the Ivanka Trump Collection in the lobby of Trump Tower in New York. More shoppers, even those in Canada, are joining a campaign to push back against Trump’s divisive rhetoric and policies.

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