Democrats embrace DEI as ‘American values’ at National Action Network
NEW YORK β Ever since President Donald Trump started purging diversity initiatives last year, the letters βDEIβ have faded from corporate boardrooms and Democratic stump speeches.
But that wasn’t the case for the past few days at the annual National Action Network conference in New York, where Democratic politicians and potential presidential candidates repeatedly made the case for diversity, equity and inclusion policies that seemed to have fallen out of favor.
βWe have the high ground on this issue,β House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries declared to a packed audience of Black activists. He criticized Republicans as βextremistsβ who βare trying to do an all-out assault on civil rights, on voting rights, certainly on diversity, equity and inclusion.β
βTheyβre not trying to celebrate merit, theyβre trying to elevate mediocrity,β Jeffries contended. βThey want to suggest that diversity, equity and inclusion are foreign values. Theyβre not foreign values, theyβre American values.β
DEI initiatives became widespread in workplaces, colleges and government agencies after Black Lives Matter protests over the murder of George Floyd in 2020.
But Republican leaders, including Trump, have argued that DEI programs are divisive and discriminate against white people.
On his first day in office, Trump signed executive orders banning βillegal DEIβ throughout the federal government. A March order went further by mandating that any companies that work with the federal government must also comply with the administrationβs anti-DEI platform.
βWe ended DEI in America,β Trump said in his State of the Union address in February.
Democrats had mixed and at times muted responses to the administrationβs anti-DEI crusade over the last year, with some in the party blaming a focus on diversity and identity as a reason why the party alienated many voters across racial and socioeconomic lines.
But some Democrats discussed as potential White House contenders are promoting DEI policies.
The rhetorical shift also reflects the partyβs efforts to court and energize Black voters, who often view attacks on DEI as linked to broader opposition to civil rights and economic justice.
Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro leaned in during his appearance on the first day of the National Action Network.
βWe believe diversity is our strength in the Commonwealth,β Shapiro said. βWe continue to have an Office of Diversity and Equity and Inclusion when other states have shuttered them.β
Maryland Gov. Wes Moore, the nation’s only sitting Black governor, touted that his state had βunapologeticallyβ responded to the rollback of DEI policies in Washington by creating state offices focused on supporting minority businesses and social mobility while combating racial inequality. He offered his state as a model for equitable policymaking.
βWe are seeing what the policies and the position are when it comes to belief in diversity from this federal administration,β Moore later told The Associated Press. βI actually think the future of how we should think about it should be seen in the present, of how places like Maryland are actually moving in this moment.β
During his remarks, Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker highlighted that heβd directed his state to βset aside a whole bunch of that money to address inequities that have plagued the Black community over so many yearsβ and defended Illinoisβ policies meant to reduce socioeconomic and racial inequality.
Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear, who will address the conference Saturday, is expected to highlight his commitment to diversity despite political backlash, according to political adviser Eric Hyers.
Beshear, who leads a state Trump last carried by more than 30 points, vetoed what he described as a hateful bill from his Republican-controlled legislature last year that would have banned diversity, equity and inclusion programs from public universities. The legislature overrode the veto days later.
βHe never wavered even when there was a post-2024 backlash,β Hyers said of Beshear. βHe believes in his core that diversity is a strength, not a weakness.β
Rev. Al Sharpton, who founded and hosts the conference, told The Associated Press he was looking for 2028 contenders to show βthat what theyβre campaigning on is something that addresses the race gap in the country, specifically, not just generalizations.β
Rep. James Clyburn, a South Carolina Democrat and influential former chair of the Congressional Black Caucus, warned that leaders in either party who do not support DEI may oppose core American values.
βDEI stands for βdiversity, equity and inclusion.β Who, in search for a more perfect union, would shy away from diversity equity and inclusion? If youβre against those things, you are against democracy,β he told the AP.
Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.
Post Comment