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Will Donald Trump’s anti-DEI campaign succeed?

Donald trump may find that there are drawbacks to using lawfare against universities. Credit: Getty

September 20, 2024 - 4:30pm

Can Donald Trump undo the years of progressive indoctrination in American educational institutions? He’s going to try.

The Trump campaign has been vocal about its intent to counter Left-wing dogma in American schools, but the specifics remain underdeveloped. One of the campaign’s key promises is to cut federal funding to any school that is found to push “critical race theory, radical gender ideology, and other inappropriate racial, sexual, or political content on our children”.

Additionally, the campaign pledges to “restore parental rights in education”, though the campaign does not specify what policies will be taken to accomplish this. Trump has vowed to pursue legal action against universities that engage in racial discrimination, yet stops short of offering specific measures to combat the promotion of DEI and critical race theory in colleges.

While there is a clear appetite among the public to combat the increasingly radical political messaging in schools, Trump’s current campaign proposals simultaneously do too much and too little. The promises do too much because they interfere with classroom instruction in a way that is unlikely to withstand legal scrutiny. They do too little because they ignore other, more effective ways to combat indoctrination in schools.

Similar policies at the state level provide some instructive examples of what does and doesn’t work. Kentucky’s anti-DEI bill ultimately failed to pass because it was considered too vulnerable to legal challenges. Republican Kentucky State Senator Mike Wilson cited concerns that the bill would not withstand judicial scrutiny, while the ACLU criticised it as overly broad and intrusive.

Similarly in higher education, Florida’s “Stop WOKE Act” was halted by a federal judge for violating the First and Fourteenth Amendments due to its restrictions on educational content. And in New Hampshire, a bill aiming to ban the teaching of “divisive concepts”, such as the “superiority” of any particular racial group in K-12 schools, was struck down for being too ambiguous in its definitions. US District Judge Paul Barbadoro noted that the bill’s vague language defining the “divisive concepts” made it impractical.

Many of these cases are ongoing, and the legality of the restrictions is still under debate. But these examples highlight a much larger issue: attempts to control classroom content through legislation often lead to protracted legal battles, diverting taxpayer resources while offering little tangible improvement. There are more strategic, targeted ways to achieve the same goals without running afoul of constitutional protections.

A more successful strategy to roll back DEI in schools involves targeting school administrations, rather than trying to dictate what is taught in the classroom. Legislative efforts that focus on eliminating mandatory diversity statements in hiring, prohibiting diversity training, and restoring non-discrimination in university hiring practices have proven more durable. By ensuring that hiring decisions are based on merit rather than ideological conformity, these laws prevent schools and academic departments from becoming echo chambers.

Cutting federal funds to schools that push DEI policies on their students — something the Trump campaign repeatedly emphasises — will probably be more effective in higher education than in K-12. Higher education relies heavily on federal funds through student aid and research grants. On the other hand, education at the primary and secondary levels is largely governed by state and local authorities, which control the distribution of federal resources.

However, there are other levers that exist at the federal level to improve K-12 education. The US Department of Education, for instance, routinely allocates research grants to public school districts for projects that are often ideologically driven. The School District of Philadelphia received a $4 million grant to study “restorative justice” disciplinary practices — despite having already implemented similar methods without robust evidence of their effectiveness. Redirecting these funds towards research on policies that strengthen school discipline, rather than undermining it, would influence other schools to adopt disciplinary approaches that protect victims of in-school violence.

As state policymakers have worked to combat the malign influence of DEI in education over the past few years, certain approaches have proven more effective than others. As the 2024 election approaches, the Trump campaign should focus on these more pragmatic solutions if it wishes to restore merit-based education free from political indoctrination.


Neetu Arnold is a Paulson Policy Analyst at the Manhattan Institute and a Young Voices contributor. Follow her on X @neetu_arnold

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J Bryant
J Bryant
3 months ago

I would suggest that Trump’s proposed actions to stop DEI are fine as policy statements during an electoral campaign. They clearly signal his direction of travel on this issue and will likely play well with at least some swing voters.
As the author rightly notes, however, if Trump wins another term he will have to focus his anti-DEI efforts on policies that have been proven to work.

Benjamin Greco
Benjamin Greco
3 months ago

Every generation puts its stamp on the culture, DEI, anti-racism, and gender politics, all things woke are Gen-Z and millennials putting their stamp on the culture. Older generations, me included, revile it and it is hated by a vocal minority within the current generation, but you can’t legislate it away. Wokism goes too far at times, but ideological movements always do. You can criticize its excesses, and rail against its foundational ideas, but it is what young people want and it isn’t going away.
When boomers came up with sex, drugs and rock n roll and protests over civil rights and Vietnam it was considered by many at the time the end of civilization, probably still is, but it profoundly changed society. I would say mostly for the good.
This is just what generations in an open and democratic society do. The only way to stop wokism is to embrace authoritarianism and that is just not an alternative I want to see happen.

T Bone
T Bone
3 months ago
Reply to  Benjamin Greco

You’re not getting it. DEI is one component of a universal religion embedded into nearly every institutional structure. It’s not itself a Cultural Zeitgeist. It’s a totalizing political mechanism to establish a social credit system. It mandates behavioral compliance.

Daniel Lee
Daniel Lee
2 months ago
Reply to  T Bone

Exactly. More than anything else, wokism is just a tool being used in this era by the same kind of authoritarians that are always with us. With the climate change cult, they’re a vindictive priestly class without the robes and candles.

Adam Bacon
Adam Bacon
3 months ago
Reply to  Benjamin Greco

But this is a top down cultural stamp, being imposed by the media and educational institutions.
That is in stark contrast to the (probably equally ridiculous, primarily drug fuelled) ‘bottom up’ cultural changes during the epoch of the Boomers, starting in the 1960s.

El Uro
El Uro
3 months ago
Reply to  Benjamin Greco

Wokism is the most blatant authoritarianism. Your choice is between Pol Pot and Pinochet. To my deep regret, Trump is not Pinochet you seem to think he is.

Andrew F
Andrew F
2 months ago
Reply to  El Uro

And we definitely prefer Pinochet to Pol Pot or even Cuba or Wenezuela or North Korea or Vietnam.

Studio Largo
Studio Largo
3 months ago
Reply to  Benjamin Greco

I really have no patience with this ‘oh well, what can you do’ defeatism wrapped in pseudo-moralism. FFS, grow a pair and FIGHT BACK.

Andrew F
Andrew F
2 months ago
Reply to  Benjamin Greco

You must be moron to believe that, sorry.
We are not in open and democratic society any more.
We are in quasi religious era when you loose your job if you express opinion not aligned with woke, lefty ideology.
I was born under communism and current West is softer version of late communism.
But going by jailing people for tweets not that much softer.

Graham Cunningham
Graham Cunningham
3 months ago

‘Targeting school administrations, rather than trying to dictate what is taught in the classroom’ is a good point. But the point should also have been made that sane measures to combat leftist proselitising in the education system are only ‘unlikely to withstand legal scrutiny’ because the American legal system (in common with others througout the West) is hopelessly in the grip of leftist lawfare. Any possibility of a return to meritocracy in education would be a huge and multi-faceted battle. It would include:
– ending the absurdity of left-partisan organisations being funded by the taxpayer.
– a clear-out of senior academics who have caved in to spoilt-brat ‘radicalism’.
– an end to academic security-of-tenure unrelated to performance.
– a complete clear-out of the multi-billion $ ‘diversity’ bureaucracy.
And most important of all in the long run…. a complete overhaul of teacher training that has long been allowed to become a training ground in progressive ideology. Reining in left-biased teaching in the classroom ultimately means getting rid of the kind of teachers who want to do it. https://grahamcunningham.substack.com/p/teach-your-children-well

Andrew F
Andrew F
2 months ago

Great post.
However main problem with author suggestions is that woke lefties are not going to hire, apart from token righty, people who disagree with their woke religion.
That why it was so stupid by formerly “right” teaching bodies in the West to accommodate lefty academics.
It was obvious, to anyone with basic understanding of left ideology, that this favour would not be returned when they are in charge.
I fail to see how this situation can be reversed by democratic means.
I am happy if you prove me wrong.

Fafa Fafa
Fafa Fafa
3 months ago

The boomer generation loosened boundaries and increased freedom of expression, the DEI generation hardens boundaries and restricts freedom of expression. Sic pendulum movetur.

Delta Chai
Delta Chai
3 months ago

“to restore merit-based education free from political indoctrination.”

I wonder which time and place the author considers as the shining example to go back to. Can education ever be apolitical? Can “merit” ever be objective and unbiased?

Andrew F
Andrew F
2 months ago
Reply to  Delta Chai

Just overlay IQ map of the world over political map.
You see right away why some countries are successful and others not.

Hugh Bryant
Hugh Bryant
3 months ago

Americans need an amendment to their constitution to explicitly guarantee the right of all races to equal treatment. It’s essential to prevent politicians from using concepts such as ‘equity’ to bribe specific categories of voter by offering them privileges at the expense of other groups.

Andrew F
Andrew F
2 months ago
Reply to  Hugh Bryant

Problem is that blacks IQ is much lower than other ethnic groups (even Muslims).
So without “affirmative action” they would never be many blacks in any serious positions.
They would be some (see normal distribution of IQ) and they would be real talent.
No one in the West wants to talk about it.
Because Dianne Abbott and David Lamy are clear examples of DEI hire in uk.

Daniel Lee
Daniel Lee
3 months ago

All excellent points, because they illustrate the need to take a completely different approach. America has always had a tradition of local control of local schools, which we should focus on restoring by way of ending “non-partisan” school board elections that merely give cover to crusading progressive activists or at the very least result in school boards easily captured by the activists infesting the school administrations. Reclaim the school boards to solve this problem from the ground up.

Michael Clarke
Michael Clarke
2 months ago

Sums up the Trump campaign. Too late to be effective and not well thought out.