Trump's 2025 Civil Rights Rollback: Legalizing Discrimination?
How the Repeal of Non-Segregation Protections Threatens DEI Efforts
In 2025, the Trump administration declared that equality is optional.
Less than 8 weeks into his second term, Trump quietly gutted Executive Order 11246, eliminating the requirement for federal contractors to provide non-segregated facilities, including bathrooms, cafeterias, and other common areas. The justification? “Deregulation” and removing so-called red tape. The implication? “No one would actually do this, so why regulate it?”
But let’s be clear: If companies are legally allowed to segregate spaces, some will inevitably do so. And when that happens, there will be nothing to stop them.
The rollback targets explicitly one of the most basic principles of civil rights enforcement: ensuring that people can eat, work, and exist in the same spaces without discrimination. It’s a move so regressive it feels like something torn from the Jim Crow era.
Why This Rollback Is So Dangerous
Removing protections against segregated spaces isn’t just absurd; it’s a calculated attempt to normalize exclusion. The administration’s argument is intentionally disingenuous: If companies truly wouldn’t engage in segregation, then why remove the protection in the first place?
This rollback is about establishing a precedent. By allowing companies to segregate shared spaces legally, the administration is sending a signal:
Inclusion is optional.
Equality is negotiable.
Discrimination is permissible, so long as you call it “deregulation.”
But the danger doesn’t end with shared spaces. If the federal government is willing to allow such blatant exclusion, what’s to stop companies from scaling back DEI efforts in hiring, promotions, and wages? The erosion of Equal Opportunity Standards starts with something as basic as shared spaces because it’s the easiest attack to justify. And if that attack succeeds, nothing else is safe.
See our reporting on the Crown Act, an effort to prevent discrimination against natural hair:
Affirmative Action Under Attack
The rollback of non-segregated facilities isn’t just about creating physical barriers. It’s about eroding the very foundations of affirmative action and equal opportunity standards. For decades, affirmative action has been weaponized by right-wing interests as a catch-all term for what they consider “unfair advantages” for marginalized groups.
But in reality, affirmative action has always been about ensuring that qualified individuals are not unjustly excluded due to systemic bias. It’s about dismantling barriers, not lowering standards. The protections established by Executive Order 11246 were explicitly designed to prevent companies from discriminating in hiring, promotions, wages, and workplace conditions.
The rollback of non-segregated spaces is so insidious that it sends a clear message: If the government is willing to abandon such a fundamental protection, then broader DEI efforts are clearly on the chopping block.
This isn’t happening in isolation. It’s part of a broader campaign to dismantle Equal Opportunity Standards and Fair Access Initiatives while claiming to cut unnecessary regulation. In reality, it’s a deliberate attempt to turn back the clock on civil rights progress.
The Economic Cost of Exclusion
The rollback of non-segregated facilities is more than an attack on physical access.
It’s a declaration that equal treatment is optional.
And if companies can legally segregate spaces, what’s to stop them from denying equal opportunities in hiring, promotions, and wages?
The data is crystal clear: Economic exclusion is already a reality for marginalized groups, and weakening protections will only deepen the divide. If these regulations were no longer needed, there would be no discrepancy.
This rollback is designed to signal that exclusion is acceptable. And if companies can get away with excluding people from shared spaces, what’s to stop them from excluding those same groups from economic opportunity?
Wage disparities are the direct result of unequal access, discriminatory practices, and the systemic undermining of DEI protections. Removing protections against segregated spaces is just the beginning. Once companies feel empowered to ignore one standard, nothing is off the table.
See our warning about the slippery slope to authoritarianism and the end of basic human rights:
What This Timeline Reveals:
Protections for marginalized groups were established piecemeal over decades. We didn’t wake up one day with equality. And we still aren’t living in that world.
Women didn’t gain protection against pregnancy discrimination until 1978. If you were born before that year, your mother could have been fired simply for your growing existence.
People with disabilities weren’t protected until 1990. You read that right. Just thirty-five years ago, it was legal to deny a job to or fire someone because they were disabled. And today? “Reasonable accommodations” are regularly denied.
LGBTQ+ workers didn’t receive Title VII protection clarity until 2012. And I don’t have to tell you that this has not been uniformly applied.
Every piece of this timeline represents a struggle for fundamental fairness that’s now being torn apart under the guise of “deregulation.” And starting with something as basic as non-segregated spaces sets a precedent for rolling back broader DEI standards.
See our reporting on continued attacks (and a loss) against LGBTQ+ protections:
Connecting the Dots:
Targeting shared spaces first may seem bizarre, but it’s a strategic move. If the administration can get away with rolling back something as fundamental as non-segregated spaces, it becomes far easier to justify weakening protections around:
Hiring – Allowing companies to abandon DEI initiatives under the guise of “efficiency.”
Promotions – Enabling companies to claim “meritocracy” while overlooking qualified marginalized workers.
Wages – Reinforcing existing disparities by eliminating accountability for discriminatory practices.
Removing protections against segregated spaces is the canary in the coal mine. If the administration successfully weakens this basic protection, the floodgates will open for dismantling hiring standards, pay equity initiatives, and promotion policies.
This isn’t about “deregulation.” It’s about reviving a system of exclusion and inequality while pretending it’s all about efficiency.
You might also be interested in our article on Tennessee’s controversial attempt to remove requirements to educate undocumented kids:
The Fight Isn’t Over—Unless We Let It Be
This rollback isn’t just about bathrooms and lunchrooms. It sends a message that exclusion is acceptable, discrimination is permissible, and equality is negotiable. If the federal government is willing to undo something as fundamental as protections against segregated spaces, then no civil rights protection is truly safe.
But here’s the truth: We’ve seen this before, and we’ve fought back before. Every protection on the timeline you just read was hard-won through activism, litigation, and relentless pressure on lawmakers. The progress we’ve made was never handed to us. It was demanded again and again.
The Trump administration’s rollback is designed to see how much injustice the public will tolerate. If we accept this, it’s only a matter of time before they target hiring, wages, promotions, and every other hard-fought civil rights protection.
Here’s What You Can Do Right Now:
Contact Your Representatives: Demand state-level protections that counteract federal rollbacks.
Support Civil Rights Organizations by Donating, volunteering, and amplifying their work. Groups like the ACLU, NAACP, and Lambda Legal fight these battles every day.
Educate and Mobilize: Share this information. Make sure others understand what’s at stake.
Push for Federal Action: Demand stronger, more comprehensive anti-discrimination legislation with actual enforcement mechanisms.
This rollback will only succeed if we allow it to.
We are NOT going back. The path ahead is forward, into progress and true equality.
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Bibliography:
“Gender Pay Gap in U.S. Has Narrowed Slightly Over 2 Decades.” Pew Research Center. March 4, 2025. https://www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/2025/03/04/gender-pay-gap-in-us-has-narrowed-slightly-over-2-decades/
“Understanding Black-White Disparities in Labor Market Outcomes.” Economic Policy Institute. 2024. https://www.epi.org/unequalpower/publications/understanding-black-white-disparities-in-labor-market-outcomes/
“The War on Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion.” The New Yorker. 2025.
https://www.newyorker.com/news/the-lede/the-war-on-diversity-equity-and-inclusion“U.S. Companies Scaling Back DEI Efforts as Trump Targets Initiatives.” Time. 2025. https://time.com/7260689/us-companies-scaling-back-dei-efforts-trump-targets-initiatives/
“Median Weekly Earnings $1,227 for Men, $1,021 for Women, First Quarter 2024.” Bureau of Labor Statistics. 2024. https://www.bls.gov/opub/ted/2024/median-weekly-earnings-1227-for-men-1021-for-women-first-quarter-2024.htm
“Executive Orders Rolling Back DEI and Affirmative Action Requirements for Federal Contractors.” Quarles. 2025. https://www.quarles.com/newsroom/publications/trump-administration-issues-executive-orders-rolling-back-dei-and-affirmative-action-requirements-for-federal-contractors-and-executive-agencies
“EEOC Signaling Crackdown on DEI Under Trump, Says Some Policies Are Illegal.” Reuters. March 20, 2025. https://www.reuters.com/legal/government/eeoc-signaling-crackdown-dei-under-trump-says-some-policies-are-illegal-2025-03-20/
“The Enduring Grip of the Gender Pay Gap.” Pew Research Center. March 1, 2023.
https://www.pewresearch.org/social-trends/2023/03/01/the-enduring-grip-of-the-gender-pay-gap/“Playbook for the Advancement of Women in the Economy.” Center for American Progress. 2022. https://www.americanprogress.org/article/playbook-for-the-advancement-of-women-in-the-economy/ending-discrimination-and-harassment-at-work/
“Women of Color and the Wage Gap.” National Women’s Law Center. 2025.
https://nwlc.org/resource/wage-gap-state-by-state/










This is a targeted attack to look like we are going backwards. Thisnshits been settled in the constitution.