Lodi News-Sentinel

Trump’s anti-diversity stance rallies many

- By Laura Colby and Erik Larson

NEW YORK — Call it the anti-diversity administra­tion.

President Donald Trump is on course to reverse decades-old efforts to empower and protect minorities. Affirmativ­e action policies at colleges and universiti­es are being reviewed by the Justice Department. Trump supports curbs on immigratio­n of non-English speakers and proposed a ban on transgende­r people in the military. He says it’s time to stop political correctnes­s.

But civil rights’ advocates promise him a fight at every turn — and a philosophi­cally divided Supreme Court will likely be the final arbiter on the most contentiou­s issues.

Trump’s backers say the change in tone is welcome. “Diversity is a way of justifying discrimina­tion — hiring people based on their race, and that’s a violation of federal law,” said Hans von Spakovsky, a lawyer at the conservati­ve Heritage Foundation. “That’s what the prior administra­tion wanted to ignore.”

The effects are rippling across America, with workers stepping out and challengin­g companies’ policies on diversity. A Google engineer wrote a memo arguing that men were more suited biological­ly to work in tech than women, drawing support of Breitbart News — the right-wing website that was run by Trump’s chief strategist Stephen Bannon. Google fired the employee this week.

Conservati­ve commentato­rs like Bill O’Reilly and Glenn Beck, and websites including the Drudge Report and Breitbart have railed against political correctnes­s for years. What’s new is that the culture warriors now have a backer in the highest office in the land against rights’ advocates.

“We must stop being politicall­y correct,” Trump wrote on Twitter in June, criticizin­g the mayor of London’s response to a terror attack attributed to radical Islamists that left seven dead. “If we don’t get smart it will only get worse.”

Trump’s stance appeals to his mostly white base, which has felt left behind in a country where it will be a minority by midcentury. His policies are also a sharp rebuke to predecesso­r Barack Obama, the first black president, and a vocal advocate for diversity.

Trump “is showing a radical disregard for the civil rights accomplish­ments of the past 50 years,” said the Rev. Jesse Jackson, who marched in 1965 with Martin Luther King Jr. in Selma, Ala., and organized the Rainbow Coalition in 1984. “All elements of inclusion are under attack. It’s a countercul­tural revolution.”

Although the majority of Americans say an increasing­ly diverse population is positive — the percentage of whites has fallen from 84 percent in 1965 to 62 percent in 2015, according to the Pew Research Center — there is a deep political divide. According to a Pew poll last year, 78 percent of Democrats agreed that immigrants strengthen­ed the country — compared with 35 percent of Republican­s.

That division was particular­ly pronounced after Trump announced plans in January to ban entry to the U.S. to people from seven mostly Muslim countries. The move was backed by 81 percent of Republican­s and only 9 percent of Democrats, according to a February Pew poll.

From executive orders to earlymorni­ng tweets, Trump has used every means to get his anti-diversity message across. His administra­tion is a reflection of his attitudes. Eighteen of the 24 Cabinet members are white males. That’s a break from the trends of earlier presidents, who had increasing­ly surrounded themselves with more women advisers and people of different races. About a third of Obama’s Cabinet was composed of white men.

“This administra­tion is signaling in not so subtle ways that we’re not as concerned about civil rights anymore,” said Clayborne Carson, a Stanford historian who has spent most of his profession­al life studying King Jr. “The impact is that certain people are going to feel empowered to move in a different direction from the ideal of diversity.”

When the Google engineer was fired, the free-speech platform Gab offered him a job, as CEO Andrew Torba said “Silicon Valley exists in a bubble world where Wrong Think is not permitted.”

The administra­tion will have to fend off legal challenges to the president’s anti-diversity policies. The American Civil Liberties Union and other groups have sued to overturn Trump’s actions, often with the support of coalitions of Democratic state attorneys generals.

“President Trump’s discrimina­tory policies aren’t just un-American — in some cases, they’re unconstitu­tional, and we’ll fight them every step of the way,” New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderm­an said in an emailed statement.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States