DEI Is Not Dead — But the Rules Just Changed
If you thought DEI was over — think again. The programs may have changed, but the compliance landmines are bigger than ever. Here’s what actually happened, what it means for your company, and exactly what you should do right now.
Let’s Start at the Beginning — What Actually Happened?
On March 26, 2026, President Trump signed Executive Order 14398, titled “Addressing DEI Discrimination by Federal Contractors.” It sounds like legal jargon, but here’s what it really means in plain English:
The government told every company that does business with it: “If you want to keep your federal contracts, you need to certify that you are not running any race-based DEI programs.” And not just as a policy statement — as a binding contract clause with real financial consequences.
Within 30 days (by April 25, 2026), every new federal contract had to include this clause. That deadline has passed. If your company signed or modified a federal contract after April 25, this language is already in your agreement — whether you noticed it or not.
Wait — Doesn’t This Only Affect Federal Contractors?
This is the question we hear most from HR managers. And the honest answer is: technically yes, but practically no.
Here’s why non-contractors need to pay attention too:
- The EEOC has signaled it will scrutinize DEI programs at all employers, not just contractors
- State attorneys general in red states are actively looking for DEI programs to challenge
- Whistleblower lawsuits under the False Claims Act can be filed by any employee — even at non-contractors
- If you’re a subcontractor (even 2–3 tiers deep), you are covered by this order
The enforcement tools have expanded. The risk is real even if you don’t have “federal contractor” in your company description.
So What Exactly Is Banned Now?
The order defines “racially discriminatory DEI activities” as any disparate treatment based on race or ethnicity in these areas:
| Area | Examples | Status Under EO 14398 |
|---|---|---|
| Recruiting & Hiring | Race-targeted job postings, diversity-only pipelines | ❌ Banned |
| Promotions | Diversity quotas in promotion decisions | ❌ Banned |
| Training Programs | Mentorship or leadership programs restricted by race | ❌ Banned |
| Vendor / Supplier | Race-based vendor preference programs | ❌ Banned |
| ERGs (Employee Resource Groups) | Open to all employees, not race-restricted | ✅ Still OK |
| Inclusion Training | Awareness training open to everyone | ✅ Still OK |
| Pay Equity Audits | Reviewing compensation gaps across groups | ✅ Still OK |
| Diversity Goal Statements | Public commitments to a diverse workforce | ⚠️ Gray Area — Review Carefully |
The short version: programs that treat employees differently based on race are now prohibited. Programs that are open to everyone — regardless of background — are generally still fine.
The False Claims Act — This Is the Part That Should Scare You
Here’s where things get very serious, very fast. The Executive Order explicitly states that DEI compliance is “material to the Government’s payment decisions” under the False Claims Act (FCA).
In plain English, that means this: if you accept a federal payment while running a prohibited DEI program, the government — or a whistleblower — can claim you committed fraud.
And fraud under the FCA doesn’t just mean paying the money back. It means:
- 💰 Treble damages — paying back THREE TIMES the value of the contract
- 🚫 Contract termination — your current contracts can be cancelled immediately
- ⛔ Debarment — being permanently banned from future federal contracts
- 🔍 Whistleblower suits — any employee can report you, and the government must review it
This is why the April 25 deadline mattered so much. Every invoice you submit to the government after that date is now an implicit certification of compliance.
What About the EEOC? Didn’t Their Guidance Change Too?
Yes — and this is the connection most employers are missing.
The EEOC’s April 2024 Harassment Enforcement Guidance — which many companies used to build their harassment policies — was rescinded under a related executive order. This means your harassment policy may now be built on guidance that the federal government has officially walked back.
This creates two problems at once:
- Your DEI policy may no longer comply with EO 14398
- Your harassment policy may be referencing rescinded guidance
Both need to be reviewed together — not separately — because they are now legally intertwined.
The State Law Wildcard — It Gets More Complicated
Here’s the part that makes HR professionals’ heads spin: several states still have laws that require certain DEI-adjacent activities. So you could be compliant with federal rules and violating state law — or vice versa.
| State | Situation | Risk Level |
|---|---|---|
| California | State law still encourages diverse hiring; pay equity reporting required | ⚠️ Conflict Zone |
| Illinois | Board diversity requirements for certain companies remain in place | ⚠️ Conflict Zone |
| New York | NYC salary transparency + diversity requirements apply separately | ⚠️ Conflict Zone |
| Texas | State actively aligned with federal anti-DEI position | ✅ Aligned with Federal |
| Florida | STOP WOKE Act limits certain DEI training already | ✅ Aligned with Federal |
If you operate in multiple states, you need a compliance strategy that accounts for both federal and state requirements — and they may point in different directions.
Your 6-Step Action Plan — Do These Now
Conduct a Privileged DEI Audit
Review every DEI-related program with legal counsel. Anything with race-based eligibility needs to be restructured or removed.
Update Your Contracts & Subcontracts
Check whether new contracts include the EO 14398 clause. If you’re a prime contractor, your subcontracts must flow this requirement down too.
Audit Your Public Disclosures
Review your website, ESG reports, and LinkedIn pages. If you have public diversity goals that reference race-based targets, update them now.
Review Your Harassment Policy
With EEOC guidance rescinded, your harassment policy needs to stand on its own legal footing under Title VII — not the old guidance document.
Open Up Closed Programs
Leadership programs, mentorships, ERGs — if any are restricted by race or ethnicity, restructure them to be open to all employees.
Train Your Managers
Managers making hiring and promotion decisions need to understand what’s changed. Ignorance is not a legal defense — and retaliation claims are still very much alive.
The Retaliation Trap — Don’t Forget This
Here’s something many employers get wrong when they start dismantling DEI programs: employees who raise concerns or report potential violations are still protected from retaliation.
If an employee says, “I think our mentorship program violates the new rules” — and you punish them for raising that concern — you’ve just created a separate, independent lawsuit. Retaliation claims are often easier to prove than discrimination claims, and juries tend to side with employees who were punished for speaking up.
Train your managers now. Document everything. And make sure your HR team has a clear process for handling internal complaints about DEI programs.
📥 Free Download — The 2026 DEI Compliance Guide
Get the complete employer toolkit — written in plain English, no legal degree required.
- DEI Program Audit Checklist (print-ready)
- What’s Banned vs. What’s Still Allowed (quick reference)
- State-by-State conflict guide (CA, IL, NY, TX, FL + more)
- Harassment policy review checklist post-EEOC guidance rescission
- Manager training talking points
The Bottom Line
DEI didn’t disappear. The legal landscape around it just became far more complicated — and far more dangerous for employers who aren’t paying attention.
The employers who will come out of this fine are the ones who act now: audit their programs, update their contracts, retrain their managers, and build policies that can stand up to scrutiny regardless of which direction enforcement blows.
The ones who will struggle are the ones who assume that because they haven’t been investigated yet, they’re safe. In 2026, that assumption is a risk you cannot afford.
Start with the checklist. Build from there. You’ve got this.