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Anti-DEI Executive Orders Can Go Forward, for Now, Says Federal Appeals Court
A district judge had "found the provisions likely unconstitutional and issued a nationwide injunction" against them; the Fourth Circuit just stayed that injunction, pending full consideration of the issue on appeal.
From yesterday's decision in Nat'l Ass'n of Diversity Officers in Higher Ed. v. Trump, by Chief Judge Albert Diaz, with Judges Pamela Harris and Allison Rushing concurring:
Pending before the court is the government's Motion for a Stay Pending Appeal. The case concerns two Executive Orders [14,151 & 14,173] that instruct executive agencies to end "diversity, equity, and inclusion" (or "DEI") programs within federal grant and contract processes. The plaintiffs—the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, Maryland and three national associations—moved to preliminarily enjoin the government's enforcement of the Orders, challenging the constitutionality of three of the Orders' provisions under the First and Fifth Amendments.
The district court found the provisions likely unconstitutional and issued a nationwide injunction barring defendants from enforcing those provisions against both the plaintiffs and "similarly situated non-parties." After the government appealed that injunction to this Court, the district court entered an order clarifying that its preliminary injunction "applies to and binds Defendants … as well as other federal executive branch agencies, departments, and commissions, and their heads, officers, agents, and subdivisions." The government now seeks a stay of the district court's preliminary injunction, or asks that it be limited only to the plaintiffs and named defendants.
Having reviewed the record, the district court's opinion, and the parties' briefing, we agree with the government that it has satisfied the factors for a stay under Nken v. Holder (2009). We therefore grant the government's motion for a stay of the preliminary injunction. The Clerk will set an expedited briefing schedule after consultation with the parties.
Chief Judge Diaz also wrote a separate opinion:
I'm satisfied for now that the government has met its burden justifying a stay of the district court's injunction pending appeal. So I join in the order granting the government's motion and in Judge Harris's separate opinion explaining why. {Like [Judge Harris], I too reserve judgment on how the administration enforces these executive orders, which may well implicate cognizable First and Fifth Amendment concerns. I likewise reserve judgment on the extent to which the government relies on the Orders' savings clause provisions as it enforces the Orders' directives against federal contractors, grantees, and private entities. See, e.g., City & Cnty. of San Francisco v. Trump (9th Cir. 2018) (declining to give effect to savings clause where that clause "in [] context" would "override clear and specific language," and render "judicial review a meaningless exercise").}
But I'm compelled to write separately to address what seems to be (at least to some) a monster in America's closet—Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion initiatives.
The Executive Orders charge that DEI (and the related DEIA, which also denotes Accessibility) policies include "dangerous, demeaning, and immoral race- and sex-based preferences" that "deny, discredit, and undermine the traditional American values of hard work, excellence, and individual achievement in favor of an unlawful, corrosive, and pernicious identity-based spoils system." The Orders seek to terminate all "'equity-based' grants or contracts" that apparently have led to "immense public waste and shameful discrimination."
But neither Order ever defines DEI or its component terms. {As a result, it's unclear what types of programs—formal or informal—the administration seeks to eliminate, and it could not respond to the district court's hypotheticals about the same. At this preliminary stage of the litigation, where the Orders only purport to direct executive policy and actors, we don't find vagueness principles outcome determinative. But I repeat that agency action that goes beyond the narrow scope set out in this motion could implicate Fifth Amendment vagueness concerns.}
And despite the vitriol now being heaped on DEI, people of good faith who work to promote diversity, equity, and inclusion deserve praise, not opprobrium. For when this country embraces true diversity, it acknowledges and respects the social identity of its people. When it fosters true equity, it opens opportunities and ensures a level playing field for all. And when its policies are truly inclusive, it creates an environment and culture where everyone is respected and valued. What could be more American than that?
Under the most basic tenets of the First Amendment, there should be room for open discussion and principled debate about DEI programs, and whether its corresponding values should guide admissions, hiring, scholarship, funding, or workplace and educational practices. And all Americans should be able to freely consider how to continue empowering historically disadvantaged groups, while not "[r]educ[ing]" the individuals within those groups "to an assigned racial [or sex-based] identity."
For almost 250 years, this nation's North Star has been the self-evident truth, "that all men are created equal." Even when we have fallen short—badly at times—we have stood up, made amends, and moved forward. But a country does itself no favors by scrubbing the shameful moments of its past. Because while history may be static, its effects remain.
From boardrooms to courtrooms to operating rooms to classrooms, previously marginalized Americans are thriving in spaces long closed to them. And we are the better for it. Yet despite this success—or because of it—we owe it to ourselves to continue forging conversations that may help us achieve that "more perfect Union." …
As with most monsters in the closet, what lurks is but a mere shadow, for which the remedy is simply light.
Judge Harris likewise wrote a separate opinion:
I concur in the order granting the government's motion for a stay pending appeal. This is a difficult case that will benefit from more sustained attention than we can give it in the present posture. But for now, I believe the government has shown a sufficient likelihood of success to warrant a stay until we can hear and decide its appeal.
As the government explains, the challenged Executive Orders, on their face, are of distinctly limited scope. The Executive Orders do not purport to establish the illegality of all efforts to advance diversity, equity or inclusion, and they should not be so understood. Instead, the so-called "Certification" and "Enforcement Threat" provisions apply only to conduct that violates existing federal anti-discrimination law.
Nor do the Orders authorize the termination of grants based on a grantee's speech or activities outside the scope of the funded activities. Rather, the "Termination" provision directs the termination of grants, subject to applicable legal limits, based only on the nature of the grant-funded activity itself. On this understanding, the government has shown the requisite likelihood that the challenged provisions do not on their face violate the First or Fifth Amendment.
But my vote to grant the stay comes with a caveat. What the Orders say on their face and how they are enforced are two different things. Agency enforcement actions that go beyond the Orders' narrow scope may well raise serious First Amendment and Due Process concerns, for the reasons cogently explained by the district court. This case, however, does not directly challenge any such action, and I therefore concur.
Finally, my vote should not be understood as agreement with the Orders' attack on efforts to promote diversity, equity, and inclusion. In my view, like Chief Judge Diaz's, "people of good faith who work to promote diversity, equity, and inclusion deserve praise, not opprobrium." I appreciate Chief Judge Diaz's concurrence and share his sentiments.
And Judge Rushing also wrote a separate opinion as well:
I concur in the order granting the government's motion for a stay pending appeal. The scope of the preliminary injunction alone should raise red flags: the district court purported to enjoin nondefendants from taking action against nonplaintiffs. But, more than that, the judges of this panel unanimously agree that the entire substance of the preliminary injunction must be stayed, not just trimmed back in scope. That's because the government has made a "strong showing" that it "is likely to succeed on the merits" and that the district court erred in concluding otherwise. In other words, the government is likely to succeed in demonstrating that the challenged provisions of the Executive Orders—all of which are directives from the President to his officers—do not violate the First or Fifth Amendments.
In addition, as Judge Harris rightly points out, this case does not challenge any particular agency action implementing the Executive Orders. Yet, in finding the Orders themselves unconstitutional, the district court relied on evidence of how various agencies are implementing, or may implement, the Executive Orders. That highlights serious questions about the ripeness of this lawsuit and plaintiffs' standing to bring it as an initial matter. Ripeness and standing doctrines "prevent the judicial process from being used to usurp the powers of the political branches," by keeping courts within their "province"—deciding "the rights of individuals" in actual controversies, Ignoring these limits on judicial power results in courts becoming "virtually continuing monitors of the wisdom and soundness of Executive action."
We must not lose sight of the boundaries of our constitutional role and the imperative of judicial impartiality. Any individual judge's view on whether certain Executive action is good policy is not only irrelevant to fulfilling our duty to adjudicate cases and controversies according to the law, it is an impermissible consideration. A judge's opinion that DEI programs "deserve praise, not opprobrium" should play absolutely no part in deciding this case.
Catherine Padhi, Mark R. Freeman, Daniel Tenny, and Jack Starcher represent the government.
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"the so-called "Certification" and "Enforcement Threat" provisions apply only to conduct that violates existing federal anti-discrimination latw."
Why is there such reluctance to concede that is exactly what the intent is?
And since when is something being "a good idea" a legal argument?
The merits of diversity is a political question that I always thought courts didn't answer.
The Clerk will set an expedited briefing schedule after consultation with the parties.
Ok, judiciary-speak for expedited means something very different than private enterprise-speak expedited. How many days/weeks is considered expedited?
My expectation of expedited is a day, or less.
Expidited is a fluid term in the court system.
CA5 issued "expidited " scheduling for the BOI reporting in the texas top cop shop case on dec 26th (?) with oral arguments scheduled for 3rd week in March 2025. (My dates may be off slightly).
apparently 3 months is expidited.
For complex appellate cases, oral argument within 3 months is actually a pretty peppy pace. The default briefing schedule is about 3 months in and of itself, and parties often ask for extensions on top of that. Then it can take 2-3 months to get on the calendar for oral argument after the briefing is in.
LB -your time frame sounds reasonable and what I would expect for "expidited" for an expidited court case.
It's a lawsuit, not a FedEx package.
On an unrelated note, nobody hates FexEx drivers.
Well, some do around here, in the boonies. They have been known to dump packages in the road because their supervisors don't give them time to find rural addresses. Which really means we hate the FedEx system, not individual drivers.
Unlike lawyers, who rejoice in mucking up the system to their advantage.
Speaking as a former FedEx Ground Driver, the problem is a combination of poor addresses and poor maps/gps.
There are a lot of discontinued roads that are still on the map, along with some paper streets that were not built in places because of ledge -- part of the street is here and part of it is over there but only the locals know that.
As an aside, when they paved the roads, they often only did the ones that still had people living on them, so it's often a patchwork of paved roads and hairpin turns onto other paved ones.
Then there are the truly bizarre things like Sea Street in Old Orchard Beach, Maine. It's the beach itself, and businesses have a Sea Street address. That's not how you get deliveries to them, you actually use a different street but how the bleep are you supposed to know this?
You tell me David. What is reasonable to call expedited?
Since a normal appeal could easily be a year, several months would be expedited.
That's because the US judicial system favors ritual over justice.
Anyone who needs 3 months to prepare their argument shows they made their decision without proper prior justification. If they didn't know why it was legal when they made the decision, the decision should be thrown out just for being premature.
99% of lawyers are parasites who give the 1% like Prof Volokh a bad reputation.
"Things I don't understand are very easy. Things I do are very hard."
The Executive Orders charge that DEI (and the related DEIA, which also denotes Accessibility) policies include dangerous, demeaning, and immoral race- and sex-based preferences" that "deny, discredit, and undermine the traditional American values of hard work, excellence, and individual achievement in favor of an unlawful, corrosive, and pernicious identity-based spoils system.
On what basis is any of that a legitimate concern of the Executive branch? Maybe the, "unlawful," part, I suppose, but it is hard to take it seriously when found marching in the rhetorical company surrounding it.
did congress pass a statute requiring DEI? If not, then terminating the program is proper.
Right, it's a political question, and the guy who wants to terminate it won. Otherwise, we could have filed the same lawsuits when Coma Joe was there.
Well, the Chief Executive, the party vested with all Executive power under Art. I sec. 1, cl. 1 of the Constitution, the one charged with taking care that federal laws are faithfully executed (That would be the President by the way), has some concern with how federal executive agencies conduct themselves in federal grant and contract processes. Does that clear up your confusion? If you were under the misconception that the federal bureaucracy was a separate independent branch of government, you were sorely mistaken.
Riva, you lie. Article I, Section 1 of the Constitution states in full: "All legislative Powers herein granted shall be vested in a Congress of the United States, which shall consist of a Senate and House of Representatives."
NG - Where did Riva lie?
The part where he said "the executive branch shall take care that the laws are NOT faithfully executed?
I’m not sure how it’s possible to misunderstand not guilty’s point. Riva made a claim about what “ Art. I sec. 1, cl. 1 of the Constitution” says. Not guilty accurately pointed out that it doesn’t say that.
It’s kind of like if you said, “I have never posted under a sockpuppet account named ‘Sonja_T’”. It’s not true, and you’d just have to be relying on someone not paying attention if you had any hope of fooling them.
Riva got the article and section wrong - Beta phi delta
He got the substance correct in his response to lanthrop. ie faithfully executing the laws passed by congress.
Substance matters - you are getting hung up on non substantive issues - deflections, etc
You and Riva lecturing us on "faithfully executing the laws passed by Congress" is pretty hilarious. Bad faith right down the line.
I will add the most salient point - Biden issued an EO at the start of his administration that was contrary to faithfully executing the laws passed by congress, Trump has now executed an EO to more closely follow and faithfully executed the laws of the US and leftists such as yourself are getting hyperventilated about a president actually faithfully executing the law.
I agree with the other comments here. If the President feels that DEI policies are implementing discriminatory acts, then of course he has the power to stop them.
I would say he had a duty to do so, in fact
It is then up to the courts to judge whether or not this is happening in the context of these suits. A stay is entirely appropriate, I think.
"The Orders seek to terminate all "'equity-based' grants or contracts" that apparently have led to "immense public waste and shameful discrimination."
But neither Order ever defines DEI or its component terms. {As a result, it's unclear what types of programs—formal or informal—the administration seeks to eliminate, and it could not respond to the district court's hypotheticals about the same."
Gee. If DEI has never been defined, and the EO to disband it is unconstitutional, then the EO to implement it also never defined it and was similarly unconstitutional.
What EO to implement it?
https://bidenwhitehouse.archives.gov/equity/
That is not an EO, but a page talking about diversity generally. It does link to some specific EOs, but you will notice that none of those fit SGT's description of an EO that "never defined it." Each EO linked defines its terms.
I was responding to your deflection. The while the precision of SGT's comment wasnt exact, the substantance of SGT's comment was basically correct.
"Executive Order On Advancing Racial Equity and Support for Underserved Communities Through the Federal Government"
On his first day in office, President Biden signed Executive Order 13985, Advancing Racial Equity and Support for Underserved Communities Through the Federal Government.
President Biden signed Executive Order 14091 on February 16, 2023.
No; it was utterly wrong. The "substance" of his comment was that if Trump's EO was bad because it didn't define the DEI it was attacking, then Biden's EO was bad because it didn't define the DEI it was implementing. But that is entirely wrong. Trump's EOs are vague and do not have definition sections. Biden's EOs do have definition sections.
Digging a deeping hole!
SGT was replying to Gaslight0
you on the other hand went so far as to try denying there was an EO to implement DEI. Then when proven otherwise, you continued with inane deflections.
It's true that Biden's EO does have definitions.
Trump's EO incorporates them by reference, and simply directs the government to stop it.
As an office receiving directions to instantiate these EO's, I can tell you Brett's flat wrong.
No one is incorporating or even mentioning the Biden admin's definitions.
He did, in fact, not.
Sarcastr0: "As an office receiving directions to instantiate these EO's, I can tell you Brett's flat wrong.
No one is incorporating or even mentioning the Biden admin's definitions."
Executive order 14151: Ending Radical and Wasteful Government DEI Programs and Preferencing
"Section 1
Purpose and Policy.
The Biden Administration forced illegal and immoral discrimination programs, going by the name “diversity, equity, and inclusion” (DEI), into virtually all aspects of the Federal Government, in areas ranging from airline safety to the military. This was a concerted effort stemming from President Biden's first day in office, when he issued Executive Order 13985, “Advancing Racial Equity and Support for Underserved Communities Through the Federal Government.
Pursuant to Executive Order 13985 and follow-on orders, nearly every Federal agency and entity submitted “Equity Action Plans” to detail the ways that they have furthered DEIs infiltration of the Federal Government. The public release of these plans demonstrated immense public waste and shameful discrimination. That ends today. Americans deserve a government committed to serving every person with equal dignity and respect, and to expending precious taxpayer resources only on making America great."
There's your reference. Having referred to the EO that defined the terms, it continues on using them.
Brett, you are making up what you think is happening.
I'm telling you what is actually happening. I see it every day.
Here's an example that recently made the headlines if you don't trust me:
https://www.military.com/history/medal-of-honor-recipient-erased-pentagons-dei-purge.html
Agriculture is removing info on weather resilience and sustainable farming:
https://www.wnyc.org/story/trumps-usda-organic-farmers-and-climate-change/
Now, I'm sure you want to think this is not what's going on since you've taken on apologist as a full time job. But it is.
Brett - what the leftists are ignoring is Biden issued an EO contrary to faithfully executing the laws. Yet getting hyperventilated when Trump issues an EO to faithfully execute the laws.
Noscitur a sociis 2 hours ago
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"you on the other hand went so far as to try denying there was an EO to implement DEI.
He did, in fact, not."
David Nieporent 24 hours ago
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"What EO to implement it?"
plausable deniability / deflection? perhaps
How is asking what EO SmartGovernmentTricks was referring to denying the existence of the EO?
Noscitur a sociis 19 minutes ago
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plausable deniability / deflection? perhaps
"How is asking what EO SmartGovernmentTricks was referring to denying the existence of the EO?"
It was his subsequent response after I posted the link to the specific EO.
Your getting good at denial
It just spontaneously appeared all on its own? Then gee, maybe it's time to disappear, and all this hullaballoo is a bunch of fake outrage.
In fact, one of the original 1787 primary duties of the President was to veto unconstitutional legislation, as a last ditch check on Congress.
“found marching in the rhetorical company surrounding it.”
Nice turn of phrase. I’ll remember it for future use.
"They shall be known by the company they keep."
Hanging with Putin is still a major problem.
As far as the courts go, it's this simple:
"We must not lose sight of the boundaries of our constitutional role and the imperative of judicial impartiality. Any individual judge's view on whether certain Executive action is good policy is not only irrelevant to fulfilling our duty to adjudicate cases and controversies according to the law, it is an impermissible consideration. A judge's opinion that DEI programs "deserve praise, not opprobrium" should play absolutely no part in deciding this case."
Any judge who wants to effect policy decisions is free to resign his/her position and run for political office.
Yup. It sounds like a couple of judges need to recuse themselves from hearing this and future DEI cases.
And in general, judges need to learn to shut their mouths and save their personal opinions for their bartenders, wives, and maybe a sternly worded letter to the editor of the local newspaper.
+1
Read Abelson's district court order. Its off the charts bad.
Rushing's final statement takes a stab at the biases displayed by the other two judges.
A judge’s opinion that DEI programs “deserve praise, not opprobrium” should play absolutely no part in deciding this case. Supra, at 5, 8.
And each of the judges that said they held that opinion did not apply it in deciding this case, so what's the complaint?
Judges need to be capable of keeping their personal views out of their judicial decisions. And if they’re not even capable of preventing themselves from writing separately to express their personal views, they have no business on the case.
If their personal views played no role in their decision, why include them in a document whose purpose is to explain the reasoning behind their decision?
Exactly.
How can a white or asian litigant ever feel that they will get a fair shake before Chief Judge Diaz? He believes that discriminating against you is fair game in a multiracial democracy for the sake of racial bean counting. Disreputable.
Impeachment is in order.
Three judges, four opinions.
The district court order was not the first one to assume that an order confining actions to those allowed by law should be interpreted as an order to violate the law.
This guy does not understand opportunity cost.
For every less qualified marginalized American now thriving, someone more qualified would have been thriving more, and society as a whole would be thriving even more.
What about meritocracy does this idiot not understand? How about we replace him with someone who failed his precious bar exam and didn't have his political connections to be appointed to lifetime federal employment?
Meritocracy is code for baking in the systemic advantages of being white and having money.
When you’re smarter and harder working the money follows
No Bubba, it's the way of perpetuating racial hatreds for yet another generation.
I never had anything against Blacks, I thought they got a rather raw deal and was proud of the fact that two of my Great Great Grandfathers had fought and bled to free them.
Then I went to UMass....
…said no non-racist, ever.
David Nevercoherent, knows what evil lurks in the hearts of men, like supporting the killing of millions of Black Babies over the last 50 years. Just to clarify, I'm against killing Black Babies, born or unborn, they can wait until their teen years to start killing each other.
Slavery was practiced by the Injuns in MA centuries before the Pilgrims got there, only reason it was finally abandoned in 1781 was it wasn't economically viable.
…and you developed an appreciation for the merits of lynching?
most of the lynched were guilty
Under that theory, most of the former presidents found guilty of 34 felonies were guilty.
The problem with lynching as a punishment is they were ultra vires. Not that blacks in the south would have received a fair trial, but still.
It’s weird that one administration can issue orders, guidance or dear colleague to create this ecosystem. Entire careers are built on DEI.
But when another wants to end it, suddenly no one knows what DEI means.
I know what DEI means. But the EO isn't based on my definition; it's based on Donald Trump's. And nobody knows what he means, except "black people." Sometimes women. Look at the MAGA calling Eric Adams — an elected official — a "DEI hire."
Bottom up, everyone gets to go with their own definition. Usually there's some consensus but it's not always formalized.
Top down, you should define your terms. Unless your real goal is fear and misery.
Yep. If you force people to guess what you want them to do, then
(a) If they don't do enough, you can fire them for not being enthusiastic enough in carrying out your orders.
(b) If they do too much — and the only way Trump will recognize "too much" is if there's a backlash — you can scream "malicious compliance" and blame it on them rather than taking responsibility yourself.
Anti Discrimination, Exclusion, and Intimidation? Who could be against that?
And what no one says is that if we just FIXED Black K-12, any Black kid who wanted to do anything, could.
No they wouldn't. If they're left handed they're automatically excluded from 1/2 of the positions in Baseball. There's way more lefties than Trans, but who stands up for Southpaw rights? We have higher rates of Mental Illness(tell me about it), Suicide, and lower life expectancy, well, you have to make some tradeoffs for being great looking geniuses.
I prefer the more historical term for lefties: Sinister.
Your dissertation may need updating: we haven’t had “Black K-12” in some time.
Don't worry Nat'l Ass'n of Diversity Officers in Higher Ed, I'm sure Biden govies hid billions in a Chase account for y'all.
A New-Jersey hospital has a DEI program asking parents of newborns if their newborn is gay and if they identify their newborn babies as male, female, transgender, genderqueer, etc.
The people who create these programs deserve opprobrium, not praise, and any judge who thinks otherwise should consider another career.