Trump signs executive order to dismantle the Civil Rights Act of 1964

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by VPS Reports

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Thursday, April 24, 2025  (DailyKos.com)

Jewish civil rights activist Joseph L. Rauh, Jr. marching with Martin Luther King in 1963.
Civil rights protests from the 1960s led by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

In a sweeping move that civil rights advocates say could unravel decades of progress toward racial and gender equity, President Donald J. Trump signed an executive order on Wednesday that seeks to dismantle a key legal tool for combating systemic discrimination: disparate-impact liability.  

The order, titled Restoring Equality of Opportunity and Meritocracy, frames itself as a defense of “colorblind” principles, arguing that policies considering race or gender in any way— even unintentionally— undermine meritocracy. But legal experts and activists warn that the directive could gut enforcement of landmark civil rights laws, including the Civil Rights Act of 1964, by making it nearly impossible to challenge discriminatory practices that disproportionately harm marginalized groups.  

 
At its core, the order takes aim at disparate-impact liability  a legal doctrine that allows plaintiffs to challenge policies that are neutral on their face but have a discriminatory effect. For example, if a hiring test disproportionately screens out Black applicants despite being unrelated to job performance, disparate-impact theory allows courts to intervene.  
 

What does Trump’s order actually do?  
– Revokes key civil rights regulations from the 1960s and 1970s that authorized disparate-impact enforcement under Title VI (which bars discrimination in federally funded programs) and Title VII (which covers employment discrimination).  
– Directs federal agencies to deprioritize enforcing civil rights laws that rely on disparate-impact claims, including in housing, lending, and employment.  
– Orders a review of all pending civil rights cases based on disparate impact, signaling an intent to drop or weaken such cases.  
– Encourages challenges to state-level civil rights laws that use disparate-impact standards.  

Civil rights groups immediately condemned the move, calling it a rollback of foundational protections.  

With a conservative-dominated judiciary, Trump’s order could set the stage for new legal battles— and potentially a Supreme Court showdown.  

For now, the order signals a dramatic shift in how discrimination will, or won’t, be policed in America. And for communities of color, the stakes couldn’t be higher.  

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