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    Home - Legal - District Court Enjoins DEI Executive Orders
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    District Court Enjoins DEI Executive Orders

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    District Court Enjoins DEI Executive Orders
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    On February 21, 2025, a U.S. District Court judge blocked portions of Trump Administration executive orders focused on diversity, equity, and inclusion programming (“DEI”). The preliminary injunction issued in National Association of Diversity Officers in Higher Education et al. v. Trump et al., Dkt. No. 1:25-cv-00333 (D. Md. Feb. 21, 2025) applies narrowly to specific aspects of the orders, but may have further impact not only to institutions of higher education that receive federal funds, but also the private sector. On February 25, an additional lawsuit was filed challenging the Department of Education’s February 14 Dear Colleague Letter (“DCL”), which may lead to further court action to block the administration’s attempts to ban DEI programming.

    The executive orders subject to the February 21 preliminary injunction were issued on January 20 and 21, 2025. These executive orders required that:

    • all executive agencies terminate “equity-related grants or contracts” (the “Termination Provision”);
    • all executive agencies require federal contractors or grantees to certify that they do not operate illegal programs promoting DEI and agree that they are in compliance with “all applicable Federal anti-discrimination laws” (the “Certification Provision”); and
    • directed the Attorney General to take “appropriate measures to encourage the private sector to end illegal discrimination and preferences” including by identifying “potential civil compliance investigations” to deter illegal DEI programs (the “Enforcement Provision”).

    By focusing on federal contractors and grantees and private sector entities, the executive orders would have allowed executive agencies to withdraw federal funding and potentially subject federal contractors and grantees and private sector entities to False Claims Act liability. Notably, the executive orders did not state criteria to evaluate the legality of a given DEI program.

    In National Association of Diversity Officers in Higher Education et al. v. Trump et al., the plaintiffs, including the National Association of Diversity Officers in Higher Education (NADOHE) and the American Association of University Professors (AAUP), sued to block the enforcement of these executive order provisions, alleging that the executive orders’ lack of definitions for illegal DEI rendered them unconstitutionally vague, and that the executive orders amounted to speech restrictions based on content and viewpoint that violated the First Amendment. The plaintiffs further argued that the executive branch does not have the authority to place conditions – including the Certification Provision – on government spending that had been authorized by Congress.

    The U.S. District Court for the District of Maryland found that the plaintiffs had cognizable claims that were likely meritorious, and issued a nationwide preliminary injunction preventing the executive orders from being enforced while the litigation is pending. The preliminary injunction applies nationwide, as follows:

    • The administration may not pause, freeze, impede, block, cancel or terminate its obligations or awards under current contracts, or change the terms of current obligations due to DEI programming as contemplated in the Termination Provision;
    • The administration may not require any grantee or contractor sign “certification” or other representation regarding its DEI programs as contemplated in the Certification Provision; or
    • The administration may not bring enforcement action based on allegedly illegal DEI programs as contemplated in the Enforcement Provision.

    What does this mean for institutions of higher education?

    Institutions of higher education who receive federal funds through grants or contracts should be aware that under the terms of the preliminary injunction, their DEI programming cannot be the reason for the federal government or their granting agencies to terminate those grants or contracts.

    Further, pursuant to the court’s findings, the federal government may not require institutions of higher education who receive federal funds through grants or contracts to make certifications or representations regarding their DEI programming as a condition of receiving such grants or contracts.

    Institutions of higher education should also be aware that additional challenges have been mounted to the Department of Education’s February 14 DCL, which asserts that DEI programming is unlawful discrimination in violation of Title VI, and should pay close attention to developments in that matter.

    As the federal government’s interpretation of discrimination law changes, colleges and universities are referring to and relying upon state law, written regulations, and court precedent for guidance. Institutions seeking assistance with reviewing their institutional policies or programs, complying with requests for certification for their federal grants or contracts, or clarifying their obligations under federal or state discrimination law, should reach out to their Hunton lawyer for guidance.



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