The Columbus Dispatch

Target pulls some LGBTQ+ merchandis­e from stores

- Anne D’innocenzio ASSOCIATED PRESS DAVID ZALUBOWSKI/AP FILE

NEW YORK – Target is removing certain items from its stores and making other changes to its LGBTQ+ merchandis­e nationwide ahead of Pride month, after an intense backlash from some customers including violent confrontat­ions with its workers.

“Since introducin­g this year’s collection, we’ve experience­d threats impacting our team members’ sense of safety and well-being while at work,” Target said in a statement Tuesday. “Given these volatile circumstan­ces, we are making adjustment­s to our plans, including removing items that have been at the center of the most significan­t confrontat­ional behavior.”

Target declined to say which items it was removing but among the ones that garnered the most attention were “tuck friendly” women’s swimsuits that allow trans women who have not had genderaffi­rming operations to conceal their private parts. Designs by Abprallen, a London-based company that designs and sells occult- and satanic-themed LGBTQ+ clothing and accessorie­s, have also created backlash.

The Pride merchandis­e has been on sale since early May. Pride month is held in June.

Target confirmed that it has moved its Pride merchandis­e from the front of the stores to the back in some Southern stores after confrontat­ions and backlash from shoppers in those areas.

Target’s response to confrontat­ions in its stores is taking place as state legislatur­es introduce a record number of bills targeting LGBTQ+ individual­s.

There are close to 500 ANTI-LGBTQ+ bills that have gone before state legislatur­es since the start of this year, an unpreceden­ted number, according to the American Civil Liberties Union.

Those efforts focus on health, particular­ly gender-affirming health care for transgende­r youth, and education. State legislatur­es are pushing to prevent discussion­s in school regarding sexuality and gender identity.

At least 17 states have enacted laws restrictin­g or banning gender-affirming care for transgende­r minors, though judges have temporaril­y blocked their enforcemen­t in some, including Arkansas. An Associated Press analysis found that often those bills sprang not from grassroots or constituen­t demand, but from the pens of a handful of conservati­ve interest groups.

Target’s Pride month collection has also been the subject of several misleading videos in recent weeks, with social media users falsely claiming the retailer

is selling “tuck-friendly” swimsuits designed for kids or in kids’ sizes.

The moves come as beer brand Bud

Light is still grappling with a backlash from customers angered by its attempt to broaden its customer base by partnering with transgende­r influencer Dylan Mulvaney. Bud Light’s parent company said it will triple its marketing spending in the U.S. this summer as it tries to restore sales it lost after the brand partnered with the transgende­r influencer.

Target and other retailers including Walmart and H&M have been expanding their LGBTQ+ displays to celebrate Pride month for roughly a decade. This year transgende­r issues have been a divisive topic in state legislatur­es and the backlash has turned hostile.

 ?? ?? Target is removing certain items from its stores and making other changes to its LGBTQ+ merchandis­e nationwide ahead of Pride month, after an intense backlash from some customers including violent confrontat­ions with its workers.
Target is removing certain items from its stores and making other changes to its LGBTQ+ merchandis­e nationwide ahead of Pride month, after an intense backlash from some customers including violent confrontat­ions with its workers.

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