Major companies abandon an LGBTQ+ rights report card after facing
anti-diversity backlash
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[September 17, 2024] By
CATHY BUSSEWITZ
NEW YORK (AP) — More than two decades ago, when gay
men and lesbians were prohibited from serving openly in the U.S.
military and no state had legalized same-sex marriages, a national
LGBTQ+ rights group decided to promote change by grading
corporations on their workplace policies.
The Human Rights Campaign initially focused its report card, named
the Corporate Equality Index, on ensuring that gay, lesbian,
bisexual, transgender and queer employees did not face
discrimination in hiring and on the job. Just 13 companies received
a perfect score in 2002. By last year, 545 businesses did even
though the requirements have expanded.
But the scorecard itself has come under attack in recent months by
conservative activists who targeted businesses as part of a broader
pushback against diversity initiatives. Ford, Harley Davidson and
Lowe’s are among the companies that announced they would no longer
participate in the Corporate Equality Index.
Emboldened by a Supreme Court decision last year that declared
race-based affirmative action programs in college admissions
unconstitutional, conservative groups have won lawsuits making
similar arguments about corporations. They’re now targeting
workplace initiatives such as diversity programs and hiring
practices that prioritize historically marginalized groups, and
widening their objections to include programs focused on gender
identity and sexual orientation.
“We don’t believe that people should be identified as groups and
that you should right past wrongs by advantaging one group and
disadvantaging another group,” said Dan Lennington, deputy counsel
for the Equality Under the Law Project at the Wisconsin Institute
for Law & Liberty. His firm has represented dozens of clients in
challenges to diversity, equity and inclusion, or DEI, programs.
Critics lament the rollback, saying it reverses years of hard-won
progress.
“Almost all LGBT community members have been bullied when they were
young, and the concept of being bullied is something that hits us
really hard. ... It feels like you’re you’re letting the bullies
win,” said David Paisley, senior research director at Community
Marketing & Insights, which helps companies market to LGBTQ+
consumers.
WHAT IS THE CORPORATE EQUALITY INDEX?
While many challenges to DEI programs have been about race,
activists working to change corporate policies they deride as “woke”
have made a point of demanding that companies end their
participation in HRC’s Corporate Equality Index. Most of the
companies that recently announced changes to their DEI approaches
did.
Like LGBTQ+ rights in the U.S., the requirements corporations need
to meet to receive a high score on the annual index have expanded
over the years.
In 2004, the index placed more emphasis on providing comprehensive
benefits to domestic partners and improving health care coverage for
transgender workers. Later it added categories that gave employers
points for promoting equality in the broader LGBTQ+ community.
In 2019, it specified that supplier diversity programs, which
encourage companies to work with minority-owned or veteran-owned
businesses, must include LGBTQ+ suppliers. By 2022, the index said
employers should offer same-sex spouses and domestic partners the
same benefits as other couples for in-vitro fertilization and
adoption, and that employers must create gender-transition
guidelines, among other changes.
WHAT HAS THE EFFECT BEEN?
Experts say the index has helped improve workplace benefits for
LGBTQ+ people. The index also prompted many companies to create
employee resource groups, which are voluntary, employee-led
diversity and inclusion groups for people with shared backgrounds or
identities, said Fabrice Houdart, a consultant on LGBTQ+ issues.
The index is also a resource for LGBTQ+ workers to consult before
deciding whether to accept a job, Paisley said.
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“A company that’s getting 100% versus a company
getting 25% is an indication to our community about which companies
are treating their employees more fairly and equitably,” he said.
WHY ARE COMPANIES LEAVING THE INDEX?
Several big companies announced they would end their participation
in the index amid pressure from conservative activists who have
threatened boycotts and firms such as the Wisconsin Institute for
Law & Liberty that have challenged DEI programs.
“We have no problem with nondiscrimination, but we’re
worried about these policies going too far and harming innocent
third parties who have either religious objections or they’re being
excluded because they’re not LGBTQ or a certain race,” Lennington
said.
Ford Motor Co. CEO Jim Farley told employees that the company
stopped participating in external culture surveys, citing the wide
range of beliefs held by employees and customers and the evolving
legal environment. He said Ford does not use hiring quotas or tie
compensation to diversity goals.
Harley-Davidson posted a statement on X about withdrawing from the
index, adding that the company does not have hiring quotas or
supplier diversity spending goals, and that employee resource groups
would focus exclusively on professional development, networking and
mentoring.
When Lowe's announced its departure from the index, the company said
it was combining resource groups into one umbrella organization. It
also planned to stop sponsoring and participating in some festivals
and parades to ensure that company policies are lawful and aligned
with its commitment to include everyone.
Brown-Forman, the company that makes Jack Daniel's whiskey, and beer
and beverage maker Molson Coors, highlighted no longer taking part
in HRC's corporate survey in their announcements about scaling back
their diversity, equity and inclusion programs.
LEGAL THREATS
Dozens of legal cases have been filed against employers for DEI
initiatives, including complaints that target hiring practices,
employee resource groups or mentorship programs that plaintiffs say
prioritize people of certain races or sexual identities while
excluding others.
Most American companies launched a review of their DEI programs last
summer in the wake of the Supreme Court decision in Students for
Fair Admissions vs. Harvard, said Jason Schwartz, co-chair of the
labor and employment practice group at Gibson Dunn, a law firm that
has helped more than 50 major corporations audit their DEI programs.
“The opponents to these efforts are winning the war of words, and
they’ve got a lot of momentum in the courtroom, so I do think it’s a
serious threat that needs to be responded to in a thoughtful way,”
Schwartz said.
But there's also a flip side. Companies built DEI anti-harassment
programs in part to mitigate potential legal risks that come with a
toxic workplace, and "abandoning these programs in fact opens them
up to risk down the road if employees feel discrimination or
harassment,” said Eric Bloem, vice president at the Human Rights
Campaign.
ALIENATING A GROWING CUSTOMER BASE
Companies that distance themselves from the Corporate Equality Index
also risk driving away a growing customer group. A Gallup poll
conducted in March found that 7.6% of adults in the U.S. identify as
lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer or some other sexual
orientation besides heterosexual, up from 3.5% in 2012. Among
Generation Z, that number climbed sharply to 22.3%.
In a survey conducted in August, 80% of LGBTQ+ customers said they
would boycott companies that are rolling back inclusion initiatives,
and more than half said they would take concerns to social media or
share negative reviews online, according to the Human Rights
Campaign Foundation.
“I think they will lose, in the end, LGBT talent and LGBT
consumers,” Houdart said. “And the parents of trans kids, which are
an increasing population in the United States, they’re probably
going to remember that those were companies who went out of their
way to side with the bullies.”
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