VA embedded DEI principles in late Biden administration

In January 2024, the Department of Veterans Affairs held a meeting to discuss survey results on employee 'pain points' tied to personal identities, aiming to deepen diversity, equity, and inclusion efforts. The initiative sought to create lasting changes within the agency. Under the subsequent Trump administration, the VA has moved to eliminate these programs.

The Department of Veterans Affairs launched an initiative in the final year of the Biden administration to integrate diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) principles designed to endure beyond that period. In late January 2024, the VA's Inclusion, Diversity, Equity, and Access Council convened to review findings from a survey. Employees identified 'pain points' linked to their identities, including race, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, religion, and generational categories such as Baby Boomers, Generation X, Millennials, and Generation Z.

Nearly 300 participants, with 281 interviewed, reported 5,710 such pain points. These included complaints about inappropriate comments from colleagues, office holiday decorations excluding certain religious preferences, and broader concerns over workplace sensitivities. The meeting, planned three years prior, stemmed from a collaboration between the Veterans Experience Office's Employee Experience Organizational Management Directorate and the Office of Resolution Management, Diversity and Inclusion. Its goal was to enhance employee experiences by addressing identity-based issues.

Participants selected multiple identities in their responses: 3% chose one, 24% two, 39% three, 21% four, 11% five, and 2% six. The council recommended redesigning data fields for 'gender,' 'sexual orientation,' and 'race' to offer more inclusive self-identification options. It also proposed a 'streamlined escalation pathway' for handling complaints related to mistreatment, harassment, or conduct issues, potentially involving interactions with supervisors or even veterans served.

One suggestion addressed supporting employees after negative encounters with customers, such as providing extra coverage for health practitioners when LGBTQ+ veterans face care denials by colleagues, though no evidence of such denials was cited.

By January 27, 2025, under President Donald Trump, the VA began dismantling these DEI efforts. 'Under President Trump, VA is laser-focused on providing the best possible care and benefits to Veterans, their families, caregivers, and survivors,' said VA Director of Media Affairs Morgan Ackley. 'We are proud to have abandoned the divisive DEI policies of the past and pivot back to VA’s core mission.'

Since then, under Secretary of Veterans Affairs Doug Collins, the agency has reduced spending by $14 million on DEI initiatives and training. It remains unclear whether the 2024 recommendations were implemented or what measures the new leadership has taken to halt the process.

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Illustration of corporate professionals discussing rebranded DEI programs amid Trump's crackdown, highlighting persistence in diversity efforts.
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Despite Trump’s DEI crackdown, corporate and campus efforts persist — often under new names

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President Donald Trump’s Executive Order 14151 directs federal agencies to terminate diversity, equity and inclusion programs. Companion bills to dismantle DEI were introduced in Congress on February 4, 2025. Yet surveys and institutional reports indicate many companies and universities are maintaining — or rebranding — related efforts.

In 2025, President Donald Trump’s return to the White House coincided with a sweeping departure from the federal workforce, with about 317,000 employees leaving through firings, resignations and retirements by year’s end, according to the Office of Personnel Management. A crackdown on diversity initiatives, new performance pressures and uncertainty over job security left morale deeply shaken, as personal stories illustrate the human toll.

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The White House recently hosted an education roundtable focused on what administration officials describe as ideological capture in higher education and the effects of diversity, equity, and inclusion policies on U.S. campuses. U.S. Secretary of Education Linda McMahon led the discussion, emphasizing what she called the need to restore free inquiry and academic rigor.

As the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) approaches its 50th anniversary, disability rights advocates warn of a crisis in federal oversight, citing Trump-era staff reductions and policy shifts at the U.S. Department of Education’s civil rights and special education offices. They worry that weakened enforcement could erode protections that ended the widespread exclusion of children with disabilities from public schools.

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The Trump administration says it is monitoring proposed Virginia legislation that would create a task force to review continued state support for the Virginia Military Institute and, separately, transfer oversight away from VMI’s current governing board. Virginia Democrats backing the measures cite longstanding concerns about the school’s campus culture and ties to Confederate symbolism, while VMI supporters warn the bills could undermine the state-funded military college’s future.

A new report from watchdog group Open the Books reveals that U.S. universities are allocating up to 70% of federal science grants to administrative overhead, including DEI programs. This practice has inflated taxpayer costs and created incentives for low-quality research. The Trump administration's push to cap these rates at 15% faces legal challenges from university groups.

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The U.S. Department of Education and the Department of Justice said January 15, 2026, that their Title IX Special Investigations Team has opened an investigation into the California Community College Athletic Association over a policy allowing certain transgender and non-binary athletes to compete on women’s teams after at least one year of testosterone suppression treatment.

 

 

 

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