Democracy Dies in Darkness

DEI is getting a new name. Can it dump the political baggage?

Under mounting legal and political pressure, companies’ DEI tactics are evolving.

May 5, 2024 at 8:05 a.m. EDT
A conceptual illustration showing a group of people working on an art exhibition. The art on the wall shows fonts and letterforms of the letters “D” “E” and “I,” although it is clear that the exhibition is still a work in progress.
As the landscape shifts for DEI programs, many companies and consultants are acting preemptively to guard against the legal threats that have led some firms to recast or discard race-based initiatives. (Luisa Jung for The Washington Post)
12 min

Last year, Eli Lilly’s annual shareholders letter referenced the acronym for diversity, equity and inclusion 48 times. This year, “DEI” is nowhere to be found.

In March, Starbucks got shareholder approval to replace “representation” goals with “talent” performance for executive bonus incentives. At Molson Coors, “People & Planet” metrics have displaced environmental, social and governance (ESG) goals, and the acronym DEI has disappeared altogether.