As key figures in the Democratic Party solidified support of Kamala Harris as their nominee for president, Rep. Tim Burchett, a Tennessee Republican, blasted her as a “DEI vice president” on social media and then as a “DEI hire” in an interview.
He was not alone. The largely Republican talking point that uses the acronym for diversity, equity and inclusion picked up pace this week as delegates and donors rallied behind Harris.
“She’s a DEI pick,” conservative talk show host Charlie Kirk said.
“This trap they’ve created for themselves of Kamala, the DEI hire, it’s not going to be very popular with the average American,” former Trump official Sebastian Gorka said on Newsmax.
A central plank in the anti-“woke” culture wars, DEI has become GOP shorthand to impugn the qualifications of people of color who ascend to positions of power and influence.
“Unfortunately, it has become common for some conservatives to attempt to discredit, demoralize and disrespect leaders of color by labeling them ‘diversity hires’ – or otherwise misappropriating the language of diversity, equity, and inclusion as thinly veiled racist insults,” Mita Mallick, author of “Reimagine Inclusion” who runs DEI at Carta, wrote in Fast Company.
When the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore collapsed in March, Mayor Brandon Scott – who is Black – was branded a “DEI mayor.”
“We know what these folks really want to say when they say ‘DEI mayor,’” Scott said at the time.
The DEI rhetoric grows out of a central Republican Party belief that society has become too fixated on matters of race. Weaponizing the term has caught on during this presidential election cycle as conservative activists, influencers and politicians increasingly blame efforts to create a more inclusive and equitable environment for everything from airline safety issues to global tech outages to the attempted assassination of former president Donald Trump.