Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
The Strange Death of DEI
The Strange Death of DEI
Jun 27, 2026 6:49 PM

More Americans than you think support training in diversity, equity, and inclusion. And why are more and more corporations looking beyond it?

Read More…

Once considered the highest rising feature of America’s business spaces, the cliffs of corporate diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) are slowly eroding under the reliable and unrelenting tide of American apathy. Fewer and fewer businesses are seeking to hire a chief diversity officer, and those who manage to get hired are finding their jobs often paired with other more traditional work responsibilities. DEI is increasingly perceived as incapable of sustaining itself, even as criticisms and concerns about litigation e more pronounced in the wake of the Supreme Court’s rejection of race-conscious affirmative action.

The right in general has hardly been subdued in its attacks on DEI: from Ron DeSantis’ ban in Florida to former president Donald Trump’s ban on military DEI initiatives (repealed by the Biden administration in 2021). Beyond the legislative arena, hard critiques of DEI e from sources such as the New York Post, whose editorial board asserted in May that DEI programs are “about nothing but rank racism,” as well as Heritage Foundation scholars arguing that DEI offices create “little more than … bureaucratic sound and fury on the taxpayers’ dime.”

Yet these stances hardly mirror the views of the general public—more than half of American workers (56%) believe that focusing on diversity, equity, and inclusion in the workplace is a good thing, with almost a third (28%) ambivalent on the issue. Only 16% of Americans seem to share the opinions of the Post’s editorial board and the Heritage Foundation. This bined with the decreased corporate interest in DEI, raises an incredibly important question: Why is DEI such a contentious issue?

Is it the fault of right-wingers high on culture war fumes seeking to undermine legitimate corporate initiatives aimed at ensuring a fortable and respectful workplace for employees from diverse backgrounds? I mean, even notably anti-woke presidential hopeful Vivek Ramaswamy’s pany offers a DEI initiative, and famed conservative/Christian-friendly chains like Chick-fil-A have sparked ire from some on the right for DEI programs that, by all appearances, seem to stem from a legitimate desire pany betterment.

But anti-woke hawks and conservative boycotters cannot bear sole responsibility for DEI’s decline. If all the anti-DEI energy ing from that 16%, one would not expect to see such a significant decline in corporate interest, particularly from panies that trend to the political left. There has to be another variable. Could DEI itself be to blame? Has DEI fallen victim to entropy? Has legitimate theory been corrupted by poor practice? Or is there something inherent to corporate diversity, equity, and inclusion programs that has caused American workplaces to question its usefulness?

DEI in Practice

While it would be easy to rack up broad criticisms of corporate DEI programs from conservatives, I thought it better to talk to a professional to understand how DEI initiatives actually function. Mandice McAllister is the manager of diversity, equity, and inclusion at Warner Norcross & Judd, a corporate law firm headquartered in Grand Rapids, Michigan. We started out with the question one might naturally ask in such a situation: How is DEI defined by its practitioners?

“It’s about fairness,” says McAllister, who’s managed DEI at the firm for the past five years. “It’s about making sure people have fair access to opportunities and advancement. We’re Americans; we want things to be fair.” When asked what DEI practitioners are specifically looking for, she starts by addressing mon misconception about racial diversity in the workplace: “It’s not quotas.” Her team is looking for overrepresentation in hiring demographics and disparities in pay equity and promotion rates. To McAllister, meritocracy is what she’s looking for—but there’s a catch. “We love meritocracy; any organization taking this seriously knows that it’s not one.”

McAllister and her team have encountered their fair share of pushback at the various organizations for which they’ve carried out DEI training. When asked what some of the mon criticisms are, she gave me her top three: “We’re focusing too much on DEI, we’re wasting money and time, and it’s racially divisive.” And yet, McAllister, notes, “They’re often just not interested in sitting down and having a conversation” about why they’re so resistant.

One of the most controversial aspects of corporate DEI training is mandating it. For her part, McAllister says her thinking has evolved on the issue. “In 2020, I was pro-mandatory DEI. We had a required awareness training that covered sexual harassment, and it felt weird for one to be mandatory and one to not be.” Yet, as time went by, she came to believe it was undercutting her goal: “I don’t think making it mandatory is effective. When you try to mandate DEI, and we’re going to talk about [workplace racial dynamics], it can inflame racial tensions. You don’t have e—you can decide to miss out on the information we present.”

DEI’s Weaknesses: Glitch or Feature?

Regarding the question of legitimate theory and poor practice, McAllister points out that different types of DEI training require different levels of information. For an awareness-based training, it’s simply not as heavy of a load. “I understand why people gravitate towards [awareness-based training] and why people with marginalized identities find that useful.”

Yet, for more e-oriented DEI sessions, the process is largely different, and McAllister doesn’t sugarcoat the issues at play and the less-than-stellar practice from some consultants. “All the workplace stuff requires a s*** ton of data—if you don’t have the data, it’s not persuasive. We have to be very robust in our methodology, and we haven’t been. Being able to articulate the meaning of the D, E, and I is critical. If you can’t present it to highlight the fundamental good in the training, it doesn’t work.”

Given that DEI is increasingly being paired with similar areas of corporate management, where’s the intersection between HR and DEI—is it a Venn diagram or pletely separate circles? Her answer takes me by surprise: “DEI isn’t generally seen as pany first.’” she admits. “HR is there to look out for pany and mitigate risk. And DEI can create some risk there.”

Well, that was unexpected. “In a sense, DEI consultants are buying into the corporate and capitalist game,” McAllister chuckles. But it’s different from the traditional HR focus on workplace performance: “I care about peace, justice, and human flourishing. Those are the things I’m trying to promote.” She closes our interview on another interesting note: “I’ve talked to conservatives about what they want in terms of racial relations, and they talk about things that are very familiar to me: parity, access, equality, things like that. A lot of times, it seems like we want the same stuff.”

The Conservative Response

Talking to McAllister revealed key insights about the on-the-ground struggles DEI practitioners face. According to her, many of the problems are practice issues, not true philosophical issues—she’s a true believer operating in good faith, and her honest evaluation of an industry she’s invested years into is a useful one. But while she addressed the question of theory and practice and voiced some critiques of the politicization of her industry, I still felt it necessary to sit down with a conservative to hear the opposition case—but not the typical one. I thought it would prove far more interesting to talk to someone who represents an alternative to both hardline DEI rejection and the more-or-less traditional DEI perspective of an advocate like McAllister.

Ismael Hernandez of the Freedom & Virtue Institute is a different kind of racial thinker. Born in Cuba, he writes in his recent book Not Tragically Colored about being an ex-Marxist and maintains that his journey to America was the catalyst for a deep philosophical transformation that led him to rediscover the values of self-reliance and personal liberty. In sharp contrast to McAllister, he gives me a notably less positive definition of DEI: “It’s an attempt to fabricate diversity by feeding people cultural and social information that’s e-based and views equity as a central e.” He views much of the modern DEI-scape as based on faulty assumptions. “It’s the belief that racism is connected to the organization’s ponents. Where is the incentive to succeed?” he asks. “The definition is impersonal and about structures. We’re not asking the question about the human person.”

Hernandez nevertheless maintains a remarkable openness to many of the terms used by non-conservative “racial justice” advocates. “I love diversity,” he says. “If you want to call what I’m doing DEI, do it—I’m simply providing an alternate framework.” Yet it quickly es apparent how Hernandez’ philosophical approach is anything but simple—it starts at his conception of the human person. “There’s a fundamental sameness to human dignity,” he asserts. “We have the same dignity and the same brokenness.”

“We need each other,” Hernandez insists. “It’s a universal experience of human frailty. You can feel an experience, intuitively, without having to use religion, of human brokenness.” He acknowledges that these intuitive experiences are felt differently by different people, seemingly a point in favor of a more intersectional worldview, yet immediately uses that acknowledgement to drill down to one of his core issues with the typical approach to DEI: “The problem is not the different modes of training; it’s the assumptions. Their approach pays inordinate attention to race at the heart of identity; when you do that, unwittingly you are inserting a human construct at the heart of human identity.”

This human construct, Hernandez argues, leads us to apply our human biases and prejudices to the study of that identity, exemplified in several diversity trainings he attended in the early 2000s. “In DEI, we don’t give any benefit of the doubt to blacks, stereotyped as oppressed, or whites, stereotyped as oppressors. It gives us an understanding of American racism that allows no disagreement,” he continues. “It’s dialectically antagonistic—when you’re seen as a specimen of a group, how do you expect people e together for anything, work included? You’re loading the gun by which pany shoots itself.”

As might be expected, Hernandez approaches DEI differently. He calls his version Commonality Training, a three-step-process that begins with the dignity of the human person, then applies that dignity to a given organization’s mission and values, and finally translates that applied dignity into virtuous workplace behavior. He tells me the focus monality is very intentional: “In modern DEI, it’s absent. It’s instead about controlled dialogue that frames the encounter with ideological poles. It’s collectivist—we’re prisoners of the categories that precede us.” To Hernandez, Commonality Training isn’t anti-DEI but a robust alternative. “We are seeing a hunger for people who want to do diversity but are scared. We are here pete with the culturally prominent model of DEI,” he affirms. “We don’t want them to control the term anti-racist.”

The Future of Race

For me, researching DEI and understanding racial questions is more than a pet interest or a mere question of corporate policy. As a nonwhite American, it’s a journey that revisits a host of other deep questions I’ve had throughout my life about unity, justice, and belonging. Hernandez touched on this aspect in our interview: “It’s a secondary, not primary, element of identity. It doesn’t mean you avoid it. It means you’re giving it its proper place. If that’s your framework in anthropology, it affects sociology.” And it does—an improper view of race, whether through ignorance or hyper-fixation, can wreak tremendous havoc on one’s ability to be hopeful about life in America.

And yet I’m reminded of a story Hernandez told me halfway through our interview. In 1962, John F. Kennedy visited the NASA Space Center to oversee America’s continuing progress in the Space Race. During the course of the visit, President Kennedy saw a black sanitation worker carrying a broom and asked about his function at the Center. Without hesitation, the man responded, “Mr. President, I’m helping put a man on the moon.”

It’s a quite possibly an apocryphal story, one told by everyone from Hernandez to Zuckerberg. But as a journalist, I know that even dubious stories contain a hint of truth, if only in the aspirations they represent. Even if JFK never told that story, someone did. It’s a cultural representation of something larger—the profoundly American belief that human dignity and purpose, to be found in the seemingly mundane and the ordinary, even given the racial prejudice felt by a black e janitor in 1962, can propel humanity to unimaginable heights of achievement. That’s human flourishing. That’s human dignity. And in the course of our often-heated debates on race, diversity, and justice, those are the things we must be pursuing: in boardrooms, on college campuses—wherever the power of American dynamism leads us. If we realize we want the same things, then maybe we can also realize we have much more mon than we think.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Verse of the Day
  Commentary on Today's Verse   Commentary on Mark 8:34-38   (Read Mark 8:34-38)   Frequent notice is taken of the great flocking there was to Christ for help in various cases. All are concerned to know this, if they expect him to heal their souls. They must not indulge the ease of the body. As the happiness of heaven with Christ, is enough...
Verse of the Day
  Colossians 3:12-14 In-Context   10 and have put on the new self, which is being renewed in knowledge in the image of its Creator.   11 Here there is no Gentile or Jew, circumcised or uncircumcised, barbarian, Scythian, slave or free, but Christ is all, and is in all.   12 Therefore, as God's chosen people, holy and dearly loved, clothe yourselves with...
Verse of the Day
  1 Corinthians 9:24-27 In-Context   22 To the weak I became weak, to win the weak. I have become all things to all people so that by all possible means I might save some.   23 I do all this for the sake of the gospel, that I may share in its blessings.   24 Do you not know that in a race...
Verse of the Day
  Commentary on Today's Verse   Chapter Contents   This psalm begins with expressions of devotion, which may be applied to Christ; but ends with such confidence of a resurrection, as must be applied to Christ, and to him only.   David flees to God's protection, with cheerful, believing confidence. Those who have avowed that the Lord is their Lord, should often put themselves...
Verse of the Day
  Romans 8:1-2 In-Context   1 Therefore, there is now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus,   2 because through Christ Jesus the law of the Spirit who gives life has set youThe Greek is singular; some manuscripts me free from the law of sin and death.   3 For what the law was powerless to do because it was weakened...
Verse of the Day
  Commentary on Today's Verse   Commentary on James 2:1-13   (Read James 2:1-13)   Those who profess faith in Christ as the Lord of glory, must not respect persons on account of mere outward circumstances and appearances, in a manner not agreeing with their profession of being disciples of the lowly Jesus. St. James does not here encourage rudeness or disorder: civil respect...
Verse of the Day
  Commentary on Today's Verse   Commentary on Proverbs 29:23   (Read Proverbs 29:23)   Only those who humble themselves shall be exalted and established.   Proverbs 29:23 In-Context   21 A servant pampered from youth will turn out to be insolent.   22 An angry person stirs up conflict, and a hot-tempered person commits many sins.   23 Pride brings a person low, but the lowly in...
Verse of the Day
  Deuteronomy 8:1-3 In-Context   1 Be careful to follow every command I am giving you today, so that you may live and increase and may enter and possess the land the Lord promised on oath to your ancestors.   2 Remember how the Lord your God led you all the way in the wilderness these forty years, to humble and test you...
Verse of the Day
  Commentary on Today's Verse   Commentary on Romans 12:17-21   (Read Romans 12:17-21)   Since men became enemies to God, they have been very ready to be enemies one to another. And those that embrace religion, must expect to meet with enemies in a world whose smiles seldom agree with Christ's. Recompense to no man evil for evil. That is a brutish recompence,...
Verse of the Day
  Commentary on Today's Verse   Commentary on Luke 10:25-37   (Read Luke 10:25-37)   If we speak of eternal life, and the way to it, in a careless manner, we take the name of God in vain. No one will ever love God and his neighbour with any measure of pure, spiritual love, who is not made a partaker of converting grace. But...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved