Donald Trump executive orders shortly after he was sworn in to change the US government’s policies on gender and diversity, following through on promises he made on the campaign trail.
He rolled back orders from the Biden administration that the Trump White House called “unpopular, inflationary, illegal, and radical practices within every agency and office of the Federal Government.”
Two of the orders he revoked included a Biden directive aimed at preventing discrimination based on gender identity or sexual orientation, and another that addressed “racial equity and support for underserved communities.”
He also signed an order desgnating two genders only – male and female – and declaring that they cannot be changed.
“As of today, it will henceforth be the official policy of the United States government that there are only two genders, male and female,” Trump said during his inaugural address earlier on Monday.
Trump has made wider promises about what conservatives decry as “woke” culture, gender and diversity, equality and inclusion (DEI) progammes.
An administration official said the executive order would “end DEI inside the federal government”, cutting funding to DEI programmes across all agencies and including a review of offices renamed because of DEI initiatives.
Several large US companies have ended or scaled back their DEI programmes since Trump was elected, including McDonald’s, Walmart and Facebook parent company Meta.
Others, like Apple and retailers Target and Costco, publicly defended their
existing programmes.
DEI supporters see the programmes as a way to correct lingering discrimination based on race, sexuality and other characteristics.
The idea received renewed attention in the wake of racial justice protests after the murder of George Floyd in 2020.
However, the landscape around diversity programmes has changed since 2023, when the US Supreme Court banned US universities from considering an applicant’s race as part of their admissions process.
The policy, known as affirmative action, was intended to counteract historic racial and ethnic disparities in higher education.
Voice of Donald Trump
No comment yet, add your voice below!