Like the chapter on USAID, Mandate’s chapter on the Labor Department and related agencies leans heavily on anti-DEI, anti-“woke” rhetoric. The first entry in the “Needed Reforms” section reads: “Reverse the DEI Revolution in Labor Policy.” It calls on the next Republican administration to “eliminate every one of these wrongful and burdensome ideological projects,” without specifying exactly what that would entail.
The entire chapter is an attack on the working class, largely under the guise of combatting DEI. “The DEI revolution in labor affected not only the administrative state, but it has also targeted much of the private sector,” the chapter reads, adding that “much of American labor and employment policy has become institutionally oriented toward ‘woke’ goals. Retracting regulations that support this revolution is a good first step, but more is needed.”
From this foundational opposition to DEI, Project 2025 pushes extreme, anti-worker policies. It calls for a drastic roll back of overtime protections. It seeks to misclassify employees as independent contractors by reverting to a rule from Trump’s first term, thus denying them benefits and protections otherwise required by law. Project 2025 also looks to weaken child labor laws and create “employee involvement organizations” as employer-friendly alternatives to unions.
Mandate for Leadership takes specific aim at the National Labor Relations Board, which helped unions secure significant gains during the Biden administration, by demanding that the next Republican president immediately fire then-NLRB general counsel Jen Abruzzo, one of the most aggressive advocates for the working class in the federal government. Trump followed through and not only removed Abruzzo but also fired Gwynne Wilcox, the first Black woman member of the NLRB, who called her dismissal a “blatant violation” of the law. In a report headlined “Trump Ousts Top Labor Board Leaders Who Backed Broader Worker Rights,” Bloomberg noted that “a White House official described those fired as far-left appointees with radical records who don’t belong in a Trump administration.”
Project 2025 also calls for the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, which investigates violations of civil rights law in the workplace, to “prohibit racial classifications and quotas, including human-resources classifications and DEI trainings that promote critical race theory.”
Trump took the issue to heart. His choice to lead the EEOC, Andrea Lucas, describes her priorities as “rooting out unlawful DEI-motivated race and sex discrimination,” according to The Washington Post. The Post wrote that Lucas, “a vocal critic of corporate DEI initiatives, will lead an agency that holds sway over policy for a vast swath of U.S. employers.”