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Friday, January 17, 2025

Opinion | Corporate DEI retrenchment is deeply worrisome - The Washington Post

We should be very worried about the decline of DEI

"It’s another indication that the United States is going backward, only four years after the George Floyd protests.

Activists demonstrate outside the Supreme Court in 2022. (J. Scott Applewhite/AP)

Diversity initiatives, particularly the diversity, equity and inclusion programs that proliferated in corporate America over the past decade, have some shortcomings. But the rapid retrenchment of DEI is another indication that the United States is going backward only a few years after the widespread protests of George Floyd’s killing seemed to signal that the country was finally ready to truly address its long history of discrimination and inequality.

Over the past few months, so many companies, from Facebook to McDonald’s to Walmart, have announced that they are ending or scaling back their DEI efforts that it’s hard to keep track. What exactly these companies are curtailing varies widely. Some had set specific targets for the number of women and people of color they hoped to hire, while others simply had more general initiatives to make sure people of all identities felt comfortable in the workplace.

But broadly, major corporations are now indicating that they will be somewhat less concerned about hiring women, LGBTQ+ people, people of color and those with disabilities and about taking steps to create positive environments for them at work.

Other institutions, particularly colleges, are making similar moves. Some schools are ending efforts to increase the number of Native, Black and Latino students they admit or cutting scholarships designated for minorities. Others are closing special on-campus centers that sponsored events and programs for Black, LGBTQ+ or female students, as well as for other identity groups.

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This diversity rollback is partly because of a changing legal climate. The 2023 U.S. Supreme Court ruling that severely restricted affirmative action in college admissions indicated that conservative judges on the high court and lower courts are skeptical of basically any consideration of ethnicity and race. So conservative legal groups have been filing lawsuits against corporations, arguing that their DEI programs too closely resemble what universities were doing before the Supreme Court’s affirmative action ruling. Many companies argue they are discontinuing diversity initiatives on their own, largely because they fear that judges would soon invalidate those policies anyway.

But this shift is about more than the law. The social and political environment in the United States has changed. I suspect some of the corporations that launched or expanded their DEI programs weren’t doing so because of their deep convictions about racism and sexism. Instead, they were responding to the broader mood in the country, where it seemed important to demonstrate your commitment to diversity and to defending minority rights.

That “wokeness” has been in decline as memories of Floyd’s killing and the protests over it have faded. The victory of Donald Trump, a strong critic of diversity initiatives, has reinforced the sense that the Black Lives Matter and George Floyd eras are over.

This advancing anti-DEI movement is grounded in two very flawed premises that undermine much-needed change. The first premise, usually articulated by conservatives, is that policies and initiatives that acknowledge gender, race and other kinds of identity are needlessly divisive. Their argument is essentially that identity-based tensions would go away or be less challenging for the country if people stopped talking about identity so much.

Second, many Democrats and liberals, while fine with, say, having a center for Black students on a college campus, are offended by diversity initiatives that cut against the meritocracy they think America can be (and generally is). So these liberals at times join conservatives in being opposed to gender or race being considered in admissions to elite high schools and colleges and for workplace hiring.

But the reality is that we don’t live in a society in which identity doesn’t matter — and people with some identities are more likely to be disadvantaged than those with others. There are numerous studies showing unconscious bias that results in employers being less likely to interview someone with a name identified with African Americans for a job. Women on average are paid less than men in part because they are less likely to be chosen for management positions. Because of historic discrimination, African and Native Americans whose families have lived in the United States for generations tend to have less wealth than their White counterparts. Transgender people and Muslims often face direct bigotry.

Present-day DEI programs and the affirmative action and diversity initiatives that came before them are implicit rejections of these myths about meritocracy and a post-identity society. A company making sure its recruiters go to historically Black colleges such as Howard to look for potential workers (an approach encouraged by some DEI programs) is acknowledging that race matters and that having employees of different races is important. Such a company is also acknowledging that there is no truly objective, identity-blind hiring process and that making direct efforts to find Black candidates addresses the common problem of heavily White companies rarely bringing in people of color because they rely on the hiring suggestions of their current White staffers.

It is not surprising that DEI initiatives have generated so much backlash because many Americans desperately want to live in a country where your gender, race, religion and sexual orientation aren’t barriers to economic success and personal freedom and where all that matters is your hard work and skills. I do too. But we can’t wish that into existence. We need DEI policies because they acknowledge the actual society we live in — in which gender, race and other identities still matter.

I would acknowledge that some diversity initiatives aren’t perfect. It’s unclear whether implicit bias training actually reduces bigoted thinking. And there are reasonable questions about how identity should be addressed. I am not sure companies should have specific targets for the number of women and people of color they hire.

But the real problem with DEI is not that it goes too far but that it doesn’t go nearly far enough. Many DEI initiatives and the broader DEI push have in some ways distracted from more sweeping policy changes the country needs. Millions of Americans, including many White people, struggle to pay for child care and housing. Broad-based universal economic programs, such as Medicare-for-all, would help a huge swath of Americans but would disproportionately benefit people of color, who tend to have lower incomes. We need aggressive policies that are targeted at specific groups, from reforming civil rights laws to include protections for transgender Americans to integrating schools so that Black and Latino students can get the highest-quality education possible.

Getting a few more women, people of color and LGBTQ+ people into corporate offices and elite universities — the focus of many DEI efforts — does not deeply address economic inequality or identity-based discrimination and inequality. And I worry that DEI at times allows a kind of fake justice as opposed to the real thing. Corporations that until recently were hiring a few more women and people of color for their corporate offices through diversity initiatives often provide very low pay and meager benefits for the much larger group of employees (including many women and minorities) who work in their stores and factories.

Many of these corporations also donate money to politicians who oppose more government funding for health care, child care and education — the kind of universal progressive policies that would benefit way more people (including those of color) than any corporate DEI program.

Universities that used affirmative action to increase their numbers of Black, Native American and Latino students — such as Harvard — have also kept in place practices that ensure a huge swath of their students come from very wealthy families (such as giving extra admission consideration to the children of alumni).

The Democratic Party doesn’t formally have a DEI program. But it takes a similar approach to that of big companies. The party is much more comfortable elevating a few people of color (Barack Obama, Kamala Harris, Hakeem Jeffries) than pushing for sweeping changes. It would have been much better if Rep. James E. Clyburn (D-South Carolina) had conditioned his 2020 endorsement of Joe Biden on Biden supporting some initiative that would have benefited millions of African Americans instead of demanding that Biden appoint a single Black woman to the U.S. Supreme Court.

Diversity, equity and inclusion was never the whole solution. But it was a small part of the changes we need to create a country where Black lives, lesbian lives, female lives and others are truly valued and respected. That DEI is dying as Trump is set to begin his second term isn’t an accident but part of the same story. America’s moral arc is not bending toward justice — and I don’t know when it will again."

Opinion | Corporate DEI retrenchment is deeply worrisome - The Washington Post

Thursday, January 16, 2025

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Disputes Hold Up Israeli Cabinet Vote on Gaza Cease-Fire Deal: Live Updates - The New York Times

Live Updates: Disputes Hold Up Israeli Cabinet Vote on Cease-Fire Deal

"The agreement, which would include the release of hostages, was met with cautious optimism. But Israel’s cabinet needed to ratify the deal, and the prime minister’s office said it was unlikely that a vote would come Thursday.

Current time in:

Jerusalem Jan. 16, 8:57 p.m.

  1. [object Object]

    The aftermath of Israeli strikes in Jabaliya, northern Gaza, on Thursday, following the cease-fire announcement.

    Omar Al-Qattaa/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
  2. Israeli police dispersing protesters against the cease-fire deal in Jerusalem on Thursday.

    Peter van Agtmael for The New York Times
  3. Israelis checking news updates in Tel Aviv.

    Avishag Shaar-Yashuv for The New York Times
  4. Injured Palestinians at Al Ahli Arab hospital in Gaza City after Israeli strikes.

  5. A child in the rubble of a building hit in an Israeli airstrike in Jabaliya. 

    Omar Al-Qattaa/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
  6. Naftali Bennett, the former Israeli prime minister, meeting with families of hostages in Tel Aviv.

    Avishag Shaar-Yashuv for The New York Times
  7. People in Gaza City mourning their loved ones on Thursday following Israeli strikes the night before.

    Reuters
  8. Celebrating in the West Bank city of Ramallah.

    Afif Amireh for The New York Times

Pinned

Last-minute disputes on Thursday held up an expected Israeli cabinet vote on a cease-fire deal with Hamas, which had raised hopes for an end to the violence after 15 months of devastating war in Gaza.

Israeli ministers were unlikely to meet before Friday to ratify the agreement, the prime minister’s office said, citing disagreements with Hamas. The holdup prompted fears of further delays in carrying out the agreement, which was announced on Wednesday by brokers Qatar, Egypt and the United States.

Peter van Agtmael
Jan. 16, 2025, 12:47 p.m. ET

Israeli Border Police cleared protesters against the proposed cease-fire deal from a highway in Jerusalem on Thursday. 

Peter van Agtmael for The New York Times
Peter van Agtmael for The New York Times
Johnatan Reiss
Jan. 16, 2025, 12:34 p.m. ET

Johnatan Reiss

Reporting from Tel Aviv

Aryeh Deri, a senior member of the Israeli coalition, told a meeting of his ultra-Orthodox Shas party that he had been informed that the disagreements with Hamas over the cease-fire and hostage release deal had been resolved. He said that a formal announcement would be made soon. There was no immediate confirmation by other Israeli officials.

Michael Crowley
Jan. 16, 2025, 12:06 p.m. ET

Asked about perceptions that the Biden administration “gave Israel a pass” on violations of human rights law, Blinken says that the way Hamas embeds itself among civilians makes such determinations “incredibly complicated.” “We continue to assess it,” he said, adding,“if we have any conclusions that we can draw in the time that remains,” they will be announced.

Michael Crowley
Jan. 16, 2025, 11:40 a.m. ET

In an unusually chaotic moment at the State Department, two people were removed from a press room briefing after angrily shouting that Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken  was a “criminal” responsible for “genocide” in Gaza. Blinken, who was delivering summary remarks about his tenure, remained largely unfazed and said that he would soon be taking questions. It was initially unclear who the men were.

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U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken was heckled as he delivered remarks about the Gaza cease-fire deal.
Ben Shpigel
Jan. 16, 2025, 11:36 a.m. ET

Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken said there were two immediate imperatives: fully carrying out the cease-fire deal and finalizing a plan that provides for Gaza’s transitional governance, security and reconstruction and that ensures that the halt in fighting will endure.

Ben Shpigel
Jan. 16, 2025, 11:37 a.m. ET

He added: “It’s going to take tremendous effort, political courage, compromise, to realize that possibility, to try to ensure the gains that have been achieved over the past 15 months at enormous, excruciating costs are actually enduring.”

Ben Shpigel
Jan. 16, 2025, 11:27 a.m. ET

Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken said at a news briefing this morning that he expected the cease-fire agreement to go into effect on Sunday. “As President Biden said yesterday, after more than 400 days of struggle, a day of success has arrived.”

News Analysis

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel at the district court in Tel Aviv, Israel, in December.Pool photo by Stoyan Nenov

The Gaza cease-fire deal between Israel and Hamas had yet to be ratified by Israel’s government on Thursday, but the battle over Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s political future has already begun.

Hours after the deal was announced, Mr. Netanyahu was facing a potential internal rebellion from far-right partners in his governing coalition on whose support he depends to remain in power.

Aaron Boxerman
Jan. 16, 2025, 10:59 a.m. ET

Hamas officials did not respond to a request for comment on the specific Israeli claims that the deal was being held up by Hamas demands over the Egyptian border and prisoners release. Earlier on Thursday, a senior Hamas official said the group was still committed to the agreement.

Aaron Boxerman
Jan. 16, 2025, 10:43 a.m. ET

Among the last-minute disagreements are changes to how Israeli forces would deploy along Gaza’s border with Egypt during the truce, said Omer Dostri, the prime minister’s spokesman. Netanyahu has argued that control of the border zone is critical to stop the flow of weapons to Hamas. Hamas is also demanding the release of “certain terrorists” unacceptable to Israel, Dostri added.

Palestinians gathering to receive food aid in Deir al Balah in the central Gaza Strip on Thursday.Eyad Baba/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

A cease-fire deal in Gaza would offer a chance to address some of the suffering of its population, aid workers said on Thursday, but they cautioned there is no guarantee that the opportunity will be translated into help for the hundreds of thousands of people in need.

Civilians across much of Gaza face severe malnutrition, and in the territory’s north, conditions border on famine, according to the United Nations. Almost all of Gaza’s population of 2.2 million has been displaced from their homes, many to makeshift camps along a coastal strip, where clean water and bathrooms are scarce. The enclave’s health and education sectors, as well as its economy, have been decimated by Israeli airstrikes during 15 months of war.

Adam Rasgon
Jan. 16, 2025, 10:18 a.m. ET

Omer Dostri, a spokesman for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, said it was unlikely that members of the cabinet would convene on Thursday to approve the provisional cease-fire agreement, claiming Israel was waiting for Hamas to back off new demands. “There isn’t any agreement at the moment,” Dostri said in a text message. “Therefore, there’s no cabinet meeting.”

Adam Rasgon
Jan. 16, 2025, 10:19 a.m. ET

In responses to Israel’s claims of new demands, Hamas has said it it was committed to the agreement announced by mediators on Wednesday. Even though negotiators for Israel and Hamas reached a provisional agreement, they have continued to discuss some details through mediators.

Jan. 16, 2025, 10:08 a.m. ET

The Israeli military said it struck approximately 50 targets across the Gaza Strip over the past day. It said it killed a Hamas militant who took part in the Oct. 7, 2023, attack, and struck additional Hamas and Islamic Jihad targets. Gaza’s health ministry said earlier on Thursday that Israeli strikes in the territory had killed 81 people and injured nearly 200 others over the previous 24 hours. Gazan officials do not differentiate between civilian and militant deaths.

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Natan Odenheimer
Jan. 16, 2025, 9:58 a.m. ET

Natan Odenheimer

Reporting from Jerusalem

Dozens of far-right Israeli demonstrators blocked a main highway in Jerusalem to protest the cease-fire deal between Israel and Hamas. Israeli police dispersed the roadblock. Eliyahu Shahar, 21, said the agreement poses a threat to Israel's safety and should be rejected, “even if it means more hostages will die.” 

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Peter Van Agtmael and Natan Odenheimer for The New York Times
Palestinians reacting to news of a cease-fire agreement with Israel, in Khan Younis, in southern Gaza, on Wednesday.Haitham Imad/EPA, via Shutterstock

Celebratory gunfire rang out across parts of Gaza on Wednesday evening as news spread of the announcement that Israel and Hamas had agreed to a 42-day cease-fire and hostage release deal, raising hopes that a 15-month war that killed more than 46,000 Palestinians and destroyed much of Gaza could soon come to an end.

“Praise God, this tragedy is over,” Mohammad Fares, 24, a resident of Gaza City displaced in southern Gaza, said, with jubilant whistling in the background. “We’re all overcome with joy.”

Aaron Boxerman
Jan. 16, 2025, 8:49 a.m. ET

The White House said U.S. officials were aware of the concerns raised by the Israeli government on Thursday and were working to overcome them. “We’re confident that we’ll be able to solve these last minute issues and get it moving,” John Kirby, the spokesman for the National Security Council, told NBC.

Palestinians on Thursday at Al Ahli Arab hospital carrying the bodies of people killed in Israeli strikes in Gaza City the night before.Omar Al-Qattaa/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Despite the announcement of a cease-fire deal between Israel and Hamas, deadly strikes in Gaza have continued.

Gaza’s health ministry said on Thursday morning that at least eight Israeli attacks in the territory had killed 81 people and injured nearly 200 others over the previous 24 hours.

Rawan Sheikh Ahmad
Jan. 16, 2025, 8:17 a.m. ET

Rawan Sheikh Ahmad

Reporting from Haifa, Israel

The World Food Program said it had 80,000 tons of food waiting outside Gaza or en route, enough to feed more than a million people. But it stressed the need for unrestricted access to allow humanitarian teams and supplies to reach those in need. Aid agencies have complained that Israeli restrictions on shipments into Gaza have prevented them from alleviating the suffering there.

Vivian Yee
Jan. 16, 2025, 8:04 a.m. ET

A delegation from the European mission that once monitored operations at the Rafah border crossing between Egypt and Gaza will come to Cairo next week to help implement the cease-fire agreement, the Egyptian government said in a statement. It said the delegation would work toward reopening the Gaza side of the crossing, which has been closed since Israel invaded the city of Rafah in Gaza last spring amid arguments over who should manage and secure the crossing. 

Members of Hamas’s military wing, known as the Ezzedine al-Qassam Brigades, arriving on vehicles in Khan Younis, southern Gaza, after the news of the cease-fire deal.Bashar Taleb/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Israel’s military campaign in Gaza has delivered devastating blows to Hamas: It has killed top Hamas leaders and thousands of militants, pummeled the militant group’s tunnel network and undermined its ability to threaten Israel with rocket fire.

When Hamas launched its Oct. 7, 2023, attack against Israel, it had hoped to ignite a regional war that would draw in its allies and lead to Israel’s destruction. Instead, it has been left to fight Israel almost entirely alone. Its allies have been decimated in Lebanon, toppled in Syria and weakened in Iran. The Houthis in Yemen have only managed to inflict occasional rocket and drone attacks, most of which Israel has intercepted.

A mural of the Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar in Tehran, Iran, in October. He was killed by Israeli troops.Arash Khamooshi for The New York Times

The younger brother of Yahya Sinwar, the Hamas leader who was killed by Israel in October, has emerged as a key commander in Gaza, where the Palestinian militant group has mounted a determined insurgency against the Israeli military’s 15-month-long campaign to uproot it.

In order to secure a cease-fire agreement, Hamas negotiators in Doha, Qatar, had to obtain the consent of the group’s remaining military commanders inside Gaza, including the brother, Mohammed Sinwar. They are in hiding and eager to avoid the reach of Israeli intelligence, so communication between them and the negotiators has been slow.

Rawan Sheikh Ahmad
Jan. 16, 2025, 6:49 a.m. ET

Rawan Sheikh Ahmad

Reporting from Haifa, Israel

The European Commission president, Ursula von der Leyen, described the cease-fire agreement as “the hope the region desperately needed.” But she added that the humanitarian situation in Gaza remained grim. She announced that Europe would provide $123 million in aid this year, along with in-kind aid such as food shipments, to support Gazans.

Nader Ibrahim
Jan. 16, 2025, 6:39 a.m. ET

Ramy Nasr, 44, a displaced Gazan who is sheltering with his wife and children in Gaza City, says he is eager to return to the city of Jabaliya after a cease-fire so he can bury his siblings and their families, who were killed in a strike in October. He says their bodies have been under the rubble since then. Six of his relatives were killed that day. Nasr, seen here with his family in a photo from November, is not sure if his house still stands, or if he will be able to dig out the bodies.

Families and supporters of Israeli hostages demonstrating outside the Israeli Parliament in Jerusalem on Tuesday.Ronen Zvulun/Reuters

When Hamas led the Oct. 7, 2023, raids into Israel, killing about 1,200 people, about 250 people were taken into Gaza as hostages, including citizens of Israel, the United States, Britain, Mexico, Thailand and other countries.

Among the captives were the bodies of 37 people killed in the attack, Israeli officials said. Now, about 100 hostages, living and dead, are still being held in the enclave, officials say.

Nader Ibrahim
Jan. 16, 2025, 5:53 a.m. ET

Israel continues to strike Gaza. Video shot near the border between Israel and northern Gaza today shows billowing clouds of dark smoke.

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AFP
Rawan Sheikh Ahmad
Jan. 16, 2025, 4:17 a.m. ET

Rawan Sheikh Ahmad

Reporting from Haifa, Israel

After Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel said Hamas had backed out of parts of the cease-fire agreement, a Hamas official said that wasn't true. The official, Izzat al-Rishq, said Hamas remained committed to the deal announced by mediators. 

Aaron Boxerman
Jan. 16, 2025, 4:00 a.m. ET

The office of Benjamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister, said Israel would not convene its cabinet to vote on the cease-fire agreement for now, citing last-minute disputes with Hamas. The Palestinian group did not immediately comment.

Aaron Boxerman
Jan. 16, 2025, 4:05 a.m. ET

Netanyahu’s office said that Hamas had backed out of parts of the cease-fire deal, without saying what they were. It added that the cabinet would not meet to discuss the agreement until Israel had been notified that Hamas had accepted “all elements.”

Aaron Boxerman
Jan. 16, 2025, 4:06 a.m. ET

Negotiators continued to work on the final details of the agreement overnight, including the identities of which Palestinian prisoners would be released in exchange for hostages in Gaza.

Aaron Boxerman
Jan. 16, 2025, 4:08 a.m. ET

Some of Netanyahu’s hard-line coalition allies have said they opposed the cease-fire, calling it an effective surrender to Hamas. If they left the government in protest, that could weaken Netanyahu’s grip on power.

Adam Rasgon
Jan. 16, 2025, 2:07 a.m. ET

The Israeli military said a projectile had fallen in the area of Kibbutz Nir Am after warning sirens blared early Thursday. The military didn’t identify the type of projectile and said the details were under review. 

Erin Mendell
Jan. 16, 2025, 1:11 a.m. ET

The Palestinian Civil Defense continued to report attacks on Thursday, saying in a statement that an Israeli bombing had killed five people in Gaza City.

News Analysis

President-elect Donald J. Trump and President Biden in November. The deal is set to start on Sunday, before Mr. Trump’s inauguration.Doug Mills/The New York Times

The long-sought, tortuously negotiated Gaza cease-fire deal announced on Wednesday came about in part through a remarkable collaboration between President Biden and President-elect Donald J. Trump, who temporarily put aside mutual animosity to achieve a mutual goal.

The two presidents directed their advisers to work together to push Israel and Hamas over the finish line for an agreement to halt the fighting that has ravaged Gaza and release hostages who have been held there for 15 months. The deal is set to start on Sunday, the day before Mr. Biden turns over the White House to Mr. Trump.

Demonstrators on Wednesday in Tel Aviv, Israel, calling for the release of all the hostages from Gaza.Avishag Shaar-Yashuv for The New York Times

The joy and relief that families of hostages expressed when the cease-fire and hostage release deal between Israel and Hamas was announced Wednesday has been matched with a sense of anxiety that many might be left behind, according to family members of people still being held captive.

Mia Schem, an Israeli woman who was held hostage for 55 days before being released during a previous temporary cease-fire and hostage deal in 2023, on Wednesday re-shared a post on social media of the remaining hostages in celebration."

Disputes Hold Up Israeli Cabinet Vote on Gaza Cease-Fire Deal: Live Updates - The New York Times