An antigay
Christian group that had called on supporters to boycott
Wal-Mart's post-Thanksgiving Day sales to protest the
retailer's support of gay rights groups withdrew its
objections on Tuesday. The American Family
Association, which had been asking supporters to stay away
from Wal-Mart on Friday and Saturday--two of the
busiest shopping days of the year--said it was
pleased that Wal-Mart had pledged in a statement to stay
away from controversial causes.
Wal-Mart said it
would make changes in the way it contributes to such
groups, earmarking funds only for specific causes it
supports, such as workplace equality, rather than
giving unrestricted gifts.
Joe Solmonese,
head of the gay rights group Human Rights Campaign, said
the change is minor and praised Wal-Mart for sticking with
its commitments to diversity and equality despite the
threats from the American Family Association. ''I
don't see it as backpedaling by Wal-Mart,'' Solmonese
said. ''I think the AFA failed and thought to
themselves, Let's declare victory and hope nobody
notices.''
However, another
group critical of Wal-Mart was skeptical. Wal-Mart's
statement ''is a confusing contortion of words that make it
completely unclear whether Wal-Mart still supports
equal rights for the [gay and lesbian] community or
not and, worse, raises real questions as to whether
they caved to the pressure from the religious right,'' said
Chris Kofinis of WakeUpWalMart.com.
While stressing
its support for diversity and nondiscrimination, Wal-Mart
said in its statement that it ''will not make corporate
contributions to support or oppose highly
controversial issues unless they directly relate to
our ability to serve our customers.''
Wal-Mart
spokeswoman Mona Williams said the company would continue
working with the National Gay and Lesbian Chamber of
Commerce and other gay rights groups on specific
issues such as workplace equality. She indicated,
however, that the company would henceforth avoid
unrestricted donations that might be used for causes
Wal-Mart did not endorse. ''Going forward, we would
partner with them on specific initiatives...as to
opposed to just giving blanket support to their general
operating budget,'' she said.
The company's
statement, she said, resulted primarily from concerns
expressed by customers and employees, not from the boycott
threat.
There was no
immediate word from a second conservative group, Operation
Save America, on whether it was reconsidering its plans for
prayer-and-preaching rallies outside many Wal-Mart stores on
Friday.
The corporate
actions that had triggered the protest plans were little
different from those taken by scores of major companies in
recent years--Wal-Mart paid $25,000 this summer
to become a member of the Gay and Lesbian Chamber of
Commerce and donated $60,000 to Out and Equal, which
promotes gay rights advances in the workplace.
However, some
conservative activists depicted Wal-Mart's engagement as
endorsement of same-sex marriage and a pledge to give
gay-owned businesses preferential
treatment--assertions Wal-Mart denied in its
statement Tuesday.
Conservative
leaders had viewed Wal-Mart's actions as a betrayal of its
own traditions, which have included efforts to weed out
magazines with racy covers and CDs with explicit
lyrics. ''This has been Christian families' favorite
store--and now they're giving in, sliding down the
slippery slope so many other corporations have gone down,''
said the Reverend Flip Benham of Operation Save
America. ''They're all being extorted by the radical
homosexual agenda.''
Justin Nelson,
president of the Gay and Lesbian Chamber of Commerce, said
earlier Tuesday that conservative activists had
misrepresented his business-oriented group as a
leading advocate of same-sex marriage in order to
tarnish Wal-Mart. ''Their campaign has not been to educate
but to mislead,'' he said.
Wal-Mart ranks in
the middle among companies rated by the Human Rights
Campaign for workplace policies toward gays. Scores of
companies now have a perfect 100 rating, while
Wal-Mart's rating has risen from 14 in 2002 to 65 this
year as it added sexual orientation to its nondiscrimination
code and offered some domestic-partner benefits.
Tim Wildmon, the
American Family Association's president, said Wal-Mart
had been responsive to conservative pressure on a different
issue, approving use of the word "Christmas" in
advertising and employee greetings this season after
shifting to a "Happy Holidays" phrasing last year.
That campaign was one of the first times Wal-Mart came
under sustained criticism from the Right.
Far more often it
has been a target of left-of-center groups, including
WakeUpWalMart.com, complaining that the company pays low
wages, skimps on employee benefits, and outsources too
many jobs. The company has responded by adding
low-cost health care plans, launching environmental
programs, and increasing diversity among employees and
suppliers. (AP)
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