The Reporter (Vacaville)

Group sues to block state’s boardroom diversity law

- Cy Crian Melley

LOS ANGOLOS >> A conservati­ve legal group announced Monday that it sued to block California’s first-in-the-nation law that requires hundreds of corporatio­ns based in the state to have directors from racial or sexual minorities on their boards.

Judicial Watch claimed in the suit filed in Los Angeles Superior Court that the law is unconstitu­tional.

“The legislatio­n’s requiremen­t that certain corporatio­ns appoint a specific number of directors based upon race, ethnicity, sexual preference, and transgende­r status is immediatel­y suspect and presumptiv­ely invalid and triggers strict scrutiny review by the court,” the group said.

Gov. Gavin Newsom signed the bill last month saying it was a crucial part of fighting racial injustice by giving minorities “seats at the table” of corporate power.

California already has a law requiring corporatio­ns to have at least one female director on their boards. Judicial Watch is also challengin­g that law in court.

The new measure cited statistics showing few of the 662 public corporatio­ns headquarte­red in California had Blacks or Latinos on their boards.

The measure requires at least two directors from different racial or sexual minority groups be appointed to boards with four to nine directors by the end of 2022. Three directors are required for boards with nine or more directors.

Firms that don’t comply would face fines of $100,00 for first violations and $300,000 for repeated violations.

Those who qualify would self-identify as Black, Latino, Asian, Pacific Islander, Native American, Native Hawaiian or Alaska Native, or as gay, lesbian, bisexual or transgende­r.

The lawsuit notes that a Senate analysis said the bill draws distinctio­ns based on race and ethnicity, and therefore, it is “suspect,” and that “the existence of general societal discrimina­tion will not ordinarily satisfy courts.”

“California’s government has a penchant for quotas that are brazenly unconstitu­tional,” Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton said in a statement. “Gender quotas and now new quotas for numerous other groups for corporate boards are slaps in the face to the core American value of equal protection under the law.”

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