The bill from Rep. Michael Cloud (R-Texas) and Sen. Eric Schmitt (R-Mo.) builds on 2024 legislation from Cloud and then-Sen. JD Vance (R-Ohio).
WASHINGTON—Sen. Eric Schmitt (R-Mo.) and Rep. Michael Cloud (R-Texas) have introduced legislation to complement the Trump administration’s push against diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) practices in the federal government, building on a near-identical bill that Vice President JD Vance introduced with Cloud while Vance was still an Ohio Senator.
The latest “Dismantle DEI Act,” announced on Feb. 4, would target any federal DEI offices as well as federal funding for DEI.
DEI practices would also include workplace requirements to assent to claims “that a particular race, color, ethnicity, religion, biological sex, or national origin is inherently or systemically superior or inferior, oppressive or oppressed, or privileged or unprivileged,” as well as key trainings advancing such claims.
In a statement to The Epoch Times, Cloud said that his bill is meant to “ensure that federal programs and funding prioritize merit, equal opportunity, and effectiveness rather than ideological litmus tests.”
The legislation also creates a basis for legal action against DEI practices in a court of law.
Under the bill, “any person may bring an action in any United States district court” over alleged federal DEI, with civil damages possible for plaintiffs who prevail.
While the Biden administration pursued what Executive Order 13985 called a “whole-of-government equity agenda,” the Trump administration has oriented its messaging and policies from equity toward the lodestar of color-blind merit.
“We are proud of our warriors and their history, but we will focus on the character of their service instead of their immutable characteristics,” the guidance states.
In an email to The Epoch Times, Damon Sidur, a spokesman for Cloud, said the Dismantle DEI Act was not aimed at black institutions or history.
Cloud told The Epoch Times that “eliminating the DEI bureaucracy does not mean erasing history—it means rejecting divisive, race-based policies that undermine the principles of fairness and excellence.”
Pressley proposed another amendment so the bill would not deny that “the Federal Government has implemented policies that perpetuate systemic racism.” That amendment failed.
Outside the Treasury Department on Feb. 4, where she and other Democrats were protesting DOGE’s access to a payment system, Pressley told The Epoch Times that “diversity, equity, and inclusion is legal.”“Discrimination,” she added, “is not.”
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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