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Only 8% of responded Suite leaders say they are seriously considering changing their diversity, equity and inclusion programs as a result of the executive orders of President Donald Trump directed to Dei, according to A Littler February 26 report.
Although 53% of Suite Condes responded after the inauguration said that the administration’s policies and rhetoric are likely to reduce Corporate DEI commitments by 2025, a 15-point percentage leap from the results of the pre-Inauguration survey, 47% of the executives said that the commitments will remain equal or grow in 2025.
However, more than half surveyed said they are concerned about the risk of DEI -related demands, government applications and shareholders’ proposals.
These worries May be well founded Since the demands and proposals of shareholders have already challenged the entrepreneurs. Objective, Costco And John Deere, to name a few, faced the pressure of shareholders about these problems of both DEI detractors and supporters.
Republican general lawyers He also sent a letter to Costco Demand from the company to abandon its DEI programs within 30 days not much after the company’s board rejecting a proposal of shareholders asking the company to produce a report on the risks of its programming DEI.
With regard to Internal DEI program, only 22% of Littler -surveyed executives said they are planning to eliminate DEI -centered papers, and 28% said they are studying the employee’s resource groups.
But of those who consider Dei Pullbacks, 52% said they seek to eliminate DEI reference points and similar metrics in part to avoid any appearance of quotas, which Trump’s administration has strongly denounced. Several companies, included GoogleThey have already made this movement.
“The letter of the law” on Dei “remains unchanged,” Kate Mrkonich Wilson, a shareholder of Littler and a member of the firm’s IE & D consulting, in a statement. But the risk of lawsuits is “amplified” due to Trump’s regulatory priorities, he said.
“As a result, it is more important than ever” for private entrepreneurs to review their Dei practices “for possible vulnerabilities to guide compliance with laws against long -term discrimination.”