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Shareholders Demand Changes As Target Boycott Rolls On




BY CARLOS SANTOSCOY 
PUBLISHED: AUGUST 21, 2010


Institutional shareholders are demanding Target overhaul its campaign
 donation policies as a boycott over an anti-gay donation gains steam,
 the Los Angeles Times reported.
On Thursday, three management firms announced they have sponsored a resolution demanding the retail giant rethink its donation policies to avoid
 future potential political hot button issues.
The action comes just days after the progressive group MoveOn.org
launched a new ad urging shoppers to boycott the retail giant for
 contributing $150,000 to MN Forward, an independent political fund
 supporting Tom Emmer, the anti-gay Republican nominee for Minnesota governor. The Minnesota-based business apologized for the donation
 but rejected a request from the Human Rights Campaign (HRC), the
nation's largest gay rights advocate, to give an equal amount of money
to a pro-gay candidate.
Emmer has been linked to the Christian rock band You Can Run 
But You Can't Hide International, whose members strongly oppose 
gay rights. He also opposes the right of gay men and lesbians to marry.

The Facebook page Boycott Target Until They Cease Funding Anti-Gay 
Politicshas attracted nearly 70,000 members. But social conservatives
opposed to the boycott have also begun to organize. Their page 
I Will NOT Boycott Target for Supporting a Conservative Candidate
has over 20,000 members and features a Target logo emblazoned
with the words “RIGHT ON.”
Tim Smith, a senior vice president at Walden Asset Management,
which is sponsoring the resolution along with Calvert Asset Management
 and Trillium Asset Management, cautioned that “imprudent donations
 can potentially have a major negative impact on company reputations and businesses if they don't carefully and fully assess a candidate's positions.”
While together the firms hold $57.5 million of Target stock, it's only a small fraction of the company's outstanding shares. However, other institutional shareholders are considering signing on to the resolution.
Electronics giant Best Buy Co. and other Minnesota-based businesses –
 including Red Wing Shoes and Polaris Industries, Inc., a manufacturer of snowmobiles – are also being criticized for contributing to MN Forward.
 Many critics, however, say they feel a sense of betrayal from Target,
 which gave the most money and has a strong history of supporting the gay community.
http://www.ontopmag.com

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