(Bloomberg) — Texas and nine other Republican-led states are ratcheting up pressure on Wall Street’s diversity programs, asking firms about their policies on hiring and supplier selections because the Trump administration moves to gut DEI.
Most Read from Bloomberg
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton wrote on Thursday to the firms saying they seem “to unlawfully advance discriminatory” diversity, equity and inclusion efforts, and demanded they reply to a series of questions on their programs. He said the firms could have breached their fiduciary duties by pursuing an “ulterior political motive or agenda.”
The letter was sent to Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Morgan Stanley, JPMorgan Chase & Co., Bank of America Corp., Citigroup Inc. and money manager BlackRock Inc.
“You appear to have embraced race- and sex-based quotas and to have made business and investment decisions based not on maximizing shareholder and asset value, but within the furtherance of political agendas,” Paxton said in a letter obtained by Bloomberg.
Paxton gave the firms 45 days to reply to the questions. “Before pursuing legal motion, we’re extending to every of you a chance to avoid a lengthy enforcement motion,” he wrote.
The banks and BlackRock didn’t immediately reply to requests for comment.
The letter comes after Trump, in his second day in office, ordered federal contractors to affirm they don’t “engage in illegal discrimination, including illegal DEI.” He directed government agencies to attract up an inventory of publicly traded firms for potential investigations into compliance violations.
JPMorgan and Goldman Sachs’ chief executive officers said on Wednesday that they may proceed to deal with efforts to advertise DEI of their workforces and customer bases. “We’re going to proceed to succeed in out to the Black community, the Hispanic community, the LGBT community, the veterans community,” JPMorgan’s Jamie Dimon said.
The attorneys general cited pledges and goals made and set by finance firms since 2021 to bolster hiring of ladies and minorities. For instance, JPMorgan pledged to rent 4,000 Black students by 2024 and Goldman set a goal of spending greater than $1 billion on diverse vendors.
Corporate America ramped up its diversity efforts within the wake of the MeToo movement and the 2020 death of George Floyd that sparked nationwide unrest.