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Corporations are backing off of DEI

iStock / Getty Images Plus/Dzmitry Dzemidovich
iStock / Getty Images Plus/Dzmitry Dzemidovich

If the last few years felt like a woke corporate takeover, this summer may mark the beginning of a return to normalcy.  

Recently, two giants of American agriculture made some major changes in how they plan to do business. Last month, John Deere committed to alter its approach to social and cultural awareness to “more closely align business strategy to meet the needs of customers.” That announcement followed a June decision by Tractor Supply to remove their entire DEI department.  

Among other things, John Deere promised to refocus on their business and brand, no longer fund “pride parades,” and remove socially motivated messaging from corporate training materials. The company also affirmed that diversity quotas and pronoun identification “are not company policy.” Tractor Supply also pledged to cease funding pride parades and to remove social ideology from training and business materials.  

Considering how recently and heavily companies adopted an LGBT agenda, these reversals are notable. We all remember Pride Month 2023, with Target targeting children and Bud Light’s odd choice of brand spokesman. 

Other major companies have also expressed regret over their aggressive social policies. In an email highlighted by Business Insider, a Microsoft “team leader” wrote, “True systems-change work associated with DEI programs everywhere are no longer business critical or smart as they were in 2020.”

Those words summarize a recently forgotten reality of the business world, namely that it is dependent on customers. Admitting that something is no longer “business critical or smart” means acknowledging that customers have rejected the bold, in-your-face social agendas that permeate so many corporations. This is the major reason that pride month this year seemed quieter than last year. The parades were still there, just as loud and perhaps more obscene, but the scale of corporate promotion was clearly scaled back

How did companies find themselves heralds of this social engineering in the first place? A key factor was The Human Rights Campaign, an American LGBT advocacy group, which launched its Corporate Equality Index, or CEI in 2002. The CEI surveys businesses and scores them on their commitment to sex and gender identity politics.  

To receive high marks, companies must incorporate LGBT hiring quotas, sensitivity training, and “trans-friendly” benefits. Companies were pressured to boost their CEI score under threat of bad publicity and promises of increased profit to investors. Given the stranglehold this has on so many companies, Tractor Supply’s pledge to cease reporting to the HRC is a significant development.  

Also, August 19 marks the five-year anniversary of another key chapter in this story, when The Business Roundtable set forth an agenda to redefine the purpose of a corporation to promote stakeholders over shareholders. Stakeholders included large advocacy groups like the Human Rights Campaign, Planned Parenthood, and BLM. The letter promised new education and training for employees in “a rapidly changing world” by fostering “diversity and inclusion, dignity, and respect.” This campaign drove the adoption of DEI programs nationwide.  

John Deere, Tractor Supply and other companies including Microsoft, Google, and Meta retracting or dissolving altogether their DEI departments is significant. 

In a free market economy, the marketplace holds heavy sway. As the Business Roundtable accurately wrote in its statement, “Businesses play a vital role in the economy by creating jobs, fostering innovation and providing essential goods and services.”  When companies lose focus on business and succumb to ideology, consumer feedback is an essential corrective. The substantial profit lost last summer when customers refused to shop at Target or buy Bud Light made a difference, and not just for those companies. Other companies started to listen, too.   

It also underscores that we can make a difference, however small. The triumph of this harmful ideology is only inevitable if we say nothing. Last year, my church requested that the pride flags be removed from the street outside of our front door. The city removed one. This year, they didn’t even go up.  

Here’s another idea: Recommend that books, especially children’s books, be added and displayed at the local library. I suggest the books He is He and She is She by Ryan and Bethany Bomberger.  

Customers have influence. And a protest need not be loud. In fact, sometimes a respectful request goes further than you may think.


Originally published at BreakPoint. 

John Stonestreet serves as president of the Colson Center for Christian Worldview. He’s a sought-after author and speaker on areas of faith and culture, theology, worldview, education and apologetics.

Michaela Estruth is a Resident Assistant at Hillsdale College. 

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