āDEI hireā has become the latest insult to Black success,Ā and presumptive Democratic nominee Kamala Harris isnāt exempt.
An insult uttered in schools and boardrooms about many marginalized people has a new high-profile target: Kamala Harris, the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee.
āI think sheās one of the weakest candidates Iāve ever seen in the history of our country. I mean intellectually, just really kind of the bottom of the barrel. ā¦ I think that she was a DEI hire,ā Rep.Ā Harriett Hageman, a Wyoming Republican, saidĀ of Harris.
Earlier this month, Rep. Tim Burchett, R-Tenn.,Ā said on X that the news mediaĀ had āpropped upā Biden, and then ādumped him for our DEI vice president.ā
For Black diversity, equity and inclusion professionals, the attacks on Harris as a āDEI hireā or a āDEI candidateā show the ways racial tropes can be used against Black people in power, despite their successes. Burchett and Hageman did not respond to requests for comment from NBC News.
This DEI rhetoric, while obviously racist and sexist, I think has deeper resonance than just the immediate backlash to Harrisā campaign. The escalation of racial and identity battles in the US today snacks of the rhetoric used in early 30s Germany to limit political access to both Jews and anyone else the Nazis were suspect of (basically any non-āAryanā - whatever definition they chose to take that to mean). The law for the Restoration of the Professional Civil Service granted them the power to remove anyone from political or civil roles if deemed āunfitā. Basically an anti-DEI bill. We already know Trump has sworn vengeance, and we know the Republicans are not above cruel and discriminatory laws. I worry this renewed focus on DEI is priming their voter base to accept not just authoritarianism, but a power structure that openly persecutes groups they have defined as āthe otherā (I recognize this is already happening at both federal and state levels, Iām just worried it becomes official, unbridled policy).