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North Carolina professor who waged 'war on DEI' at university touts win

North Carolina professor who waged 'war on DEI' at university touts win

Yahoo11-04-2025
North Carolina State University professor Stephen Porter is celebrating after his university ditched DEI in its strategic plan following his formal complaint.
Porter has taught applied statistics and data analysis to graduate students at NC State since 2011. The self-described "populist Republican" has been fighting against DEI policies at the university for the past decade and believes he achieved his first victory in February.
"Two weeks ago, I filed a complaint citing four violations of the UNC System's policies on institutional neutrality and the ban on compelled speech. The university has now conceded on three out of four counts—but they're saying as little as possible about it," Porter wrote on his blog.
In an interview with Fox News Digital, Porter said he was surprised and thrilled when he learned the university announced it would be making changes, just two weeks after he had filed his complaint.
Unc Board Of Governors Votes To Repeal Dei Mandates For North Carolina Public Universities
"I wasn't sure exactly what was going to happen. So I was really, really happy with the final outcome," he said.
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The university announced on February 25 that it had made revisions to the language in its strategic plan and vision and values statements in order to align with the UNC System's equality policy.
Porter had filed a complaint to the UNC Board of Governors on February 8 alleging NC State was violating the UNC System policies on institutional neutrality and compelled speech in multiple ways, including in its strategic plan.
In 2023, the UNC Board of Governors voted to ban DEI statements and compelled speech from admission, hiring, promotion and tenure practices at 16 public universities.
UNC also repealed and replaced its diversity and inclusion policy with an "equality policy," which requires schools to "comply with nondiscrimination laws, comply with institutional neutrality, refrain from compelling others' speech, and refrain from promoting political or social concepts through training or required beliefs."
University Of North Carolina Moves To Ban 'Diversity, Equity And Inclusion' Statements In Anti-woke Backlash
Porter said these policies "marked a significant victory for intellectual freedom in North Carolina's public universities."
Yet he says his university simply moved its DEI measures "underground" rather than actually eliminating them.
For example, DEI terms remained in NC State's strategic plan and other strategic plans in various colleges at the university, he said. The university also renamed its DEI office multiple times rather than abolish the office.
"To me, it was really insulting when they just renamed the office. It's like, really? That's how you're complying with this?" he remarked.
The university should have gotten rid of this office and hired people "who actually believe in equality of opportunity as opposed to equality of outcomes," he added.
Porter's complaint to the board cited other alleged violations, such as 4,750 references to "diversity, equity and inclusion" on administrative websites and text on the university's Pride Center website which said that students and faculty members are required to use a student's preferred pronouns. That text has since been removed from the university website.
University Of North Carolina Committee Scraps Dei Goals, Roles In Dramatic Policy Shift
In Porter's complaint, he asked the board to review these alleged violations and take any necessary corrective action.
Although he didn't hear anything back, he was pleasantly surprised to see the university announcement and said it appeared that the university had been "quietly scrubbing" language from some of the websites he flagged in his complaint.
"I was astonished I won on the strategic plan," he told Fox News Digital. "That was the one I really cared about. I thought, boy if anything can happen, if we can get this stuff out of the strategic plans, that is just a huge, huge victory."
When reached for comment, North Carolina State University referred Fox News Digital to the university's February statement about the changes.
The UNC Board of Governors did not respond to a request for comment.
The professor's victory comes after he lost a federal civil rights lawsuit against NC State in 2021 in which he alleged retaliation for criticizing DEI and social justice at the university.
The university announcement came just two weeks after universities in the state were ordered to drop any mandated diversity, equity and inclusion course credits, in order to comply with President Trump's anti-DEI executive order, Inside Higher Ed reported.
Porter told Fox News Digital he was pleased by the Trump administration's actions tackling DEI in education.
"I wake up every day eager to read the news," Porter said. "It's been absolutely delightful. A fantasy come true."Original article source: North Carolina professor who waged 'war on DEI' at university touts win
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News Analysis: Newsom's decision to fight fire with fire could have profound political consequences
News Analysis: Newsom's decision to fight fire with fire could have profound political consequences

Yahoo

time28 minutes ago

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News Analysis: Newsom's decision to fight fire with fire could have profound political consequences

Deep in the badlands of defeat, Democrats have soul-searched about what went wrong last November, tinkered with a thousand-plus thinkpieces and desperately cast for a strategy to reboot their stalled-out party. Amid the noise, California Gov. Gavin Newsom has recently championed an unlikely game plan: Forget the high road, fight fire with fire and embrace the very tactics that virtue-minded Democrats have long decried. Could the dark art of political gerrymandering be the thing that saves democracy from Trump's increasingly authoritarian impulses? That's essentially the pitch Newsom is making to California voters with his audacious new special election campaign. As Texas Democrats dig in to block a Republican-led redistricting push and Trump muscles to consolidate power wherever he can, Newsom wants to redraw California's own congressional districts to favor Democrats. His goal: counter Trump's drive for more GOP House seats with a power play of his own. 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Shortly after Trump took office in January, Newsom walked a fine line between criticizing the president and his policies and being more diplomatic, especially after the California wildfires — in hopes of appealing to any semblance of compassion and presidential responsibility Trump possessed. Newsom had spent the first months of the new administration trying to reshape the California-vs.-Trump narrative that dominated the president's first term and move away from his party's prior "resistance" brand. Those conciliatory overtures coincided with Newsom's embrace of a more ecumenical posture, hosting MAGA leaders on his podcast and taking a position on transgender athletes' participation in women's sports that contradicted the Democratic orthodoxy. Newsom insisted that he engaged in those conversations to better understand political views that diverged from his own, especially after Trump's victory in November. However, there was the unmistakable whiff of an ambitious politician trying to broaden his national appeal by inching away from his reputation as a West Coast liberal. Newsom's reluctance to readopt the Trump resistance mantle ended after the president sent California National Guard troops into Los Angeles amid immigration sweeps and ensuing protests in June. Those actions revealed Trump's unchecked vindictiveness and abject lack of morals and honor, Newsom said. Of late, Newsom has defended the juvenile tone of his press aides' posts mocking Trump's own all-caps screeds, and questioned why critics would excoriate his parody and not the president's own unhinged social media utterances. "If you've got issues with what I'm putting out, you sure as hell should have concerns about what he's putting out as president," Newsom said last week. "So to the extent it's gotten some attention, I'm pleased." In an attention-deficit economy where standing out is half the battle, the posts sparkle with unapologetic swagger. And they make clear that Newsom is in on the joke. 'To a certain set of folks who operated under the old rules, this could be seen as, 'Wow, this is really outlandish.' But I think they are making the calculation that Democrats want folks that are going to play under this new set of rules that Trump has established,' Liao said. At a moment when the Democratic party is still occupied with post-defeat recriminations and what's-next vision boarding, Newsom has emerged from the bog with something resembling a plan. And he's betting the house on his deep-blue state's willingness to fight fire with fire. Times staff writers Seema Mehta and Laura Nelson contributed to this report. Sign up for Essential California for news, features and recommendations from the L.A. Times and beyond in your inbox six days a week. This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Behind the journey: Why did Congressman Hamadeh travel from Jerusalem to Damascus?
Behind the journey: Why did Congressman Hamadeh travel from Jerusalem to Damascus?

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Behind the journey: Why did Congressman Hamadeh travel from Jerusalem to Damascus?

US Congressman Abraham J. Hamadeh travelled to Syria to 'discuss the Congressman's continuing efforts to bring Americans home" and advance peace US Rep. Abraham J. Hamadeh made an important trip to the Middle East this week that included what his office called an 'unprecedented trip from Jerusalem to Damascus.' The Republican from Arizona met with Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa and Syrian Foreign Minister Asaad Hassan al-Shaibani during the trip to Syria. This is significant because Syria is currently continuing its transition from the rule of the Assad regime, which fell in December 2024, to a new government that has promised to unify the country. However, tensions between groups have led to infighting among the Druze, Bedouins, and others. Hamadeh's trip to the region illustrates US engagement with Israel, Syria, and key officials in both countries. According to a statement from Hamadeh's office, he travelled to Syria to 'discuss the congressman's continuing efforts to bring Americans home, advance 'Peace Through Strength,' and advocate for a Syria that looks toward the future and not the past.' However, the larger symbolic importance of this visit is that it was a historic trip by a US official from Jerusalem to Damascus. His office says it is the first time in decades that this has happened. It harkens back to the era of US 'shuttle' diplomacy, when American foreign policy heavyweights, such as Henry Kissinger, would travel around the region. Druze in Israeli and Syrian society On Thursday, Hamadeh met with Sheikh Mowafaq Tarif, the spiritual leader of Israel's Druze community. They discussed regional security, the Druze role in Israeli society, and recent attacks on Druze in Syria. Last month, Israel bombed Damascus to deter attacks on the Druze in Syria. The US President Donald Trump's administration has worked to engage with Syria. Trump appointed US Ambassador to Turkey Tom Barrack as US envoy to Syria in May. Barrack has played a key role since then in ensuring that Syria has the best chance possible regarding US ties and what may come next. This includes reducing US sanctions on Syria. The envoy has also shuttled back and forth to Beirut and around the Middle East, becoming a key figure in Trump's regional doctrine. Trump leans on figures such as Barrack and Steve Witkoff to see his policies through. Hamadeh has shown, through this trip to the region, that he is willing to personally go to the places that matter the most in terms of the future of the Middle East. The Republican congressman brings experience to the table in his meetings. As Jewish Insider noted in March, 'Hamadeh is the child of Syrian immigrants with Druze, Kurdish, and Muslim heritage and served in the US military in Saudi Arabia,' giving him a unique perspective on regional affairs. HIS OFFICE said on Monday that 'as an emissary of the Peace Through Strength agenda, Congressman Hamadeh, a former US Army Reserve intelligence officer, was in Syria for six hours to meet with President al-Sharaa to discuss the return of Kayla Mueller's body to her family in Arizona, the need to establish a secure humanitarian corridor for the safe delivery of medical and humanitarian aid to Sweida, and the need for Syria to attain normalization with Israel and join the Abraham Accords.' It also noted that 'in the meeting, Congressman Hamadeh strongly emphasized the need for Syria to course correct in light of recent tragic events.' 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He is the co-author of the bipartisan Promoting Education on the Abraham Accords for Comprehensive Engagement (PEACE) Act, 'which aims to strengthen US diplomatic engagement by institutionalizing training on the Abraham Accords and other normalization agreements at the US State Department.' His visit to Syria builds on an earlier visit in April by Republican Congressmen Marlin Stutzman of Indiana and Cory Mills of Florida. They were the first members of Congress to visit Syria after the fall of the Assad regime. It remains to be seen what comes next. It is important for Damascus to work with the US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces in eastern Syria toward unity. However, Damascus should also respect the SDF, which is a mostly Kurdish force, and also respect requests for a less centralized government. Minorities in Syria are concerned about elements within the government and their supporters. The government has not been able to rein in extremists who have attacked Alawites and Druze. In many cases, it appears to be complicit in the attacks and then tries to walk back its mistakes when things have gone too far.

California Democrats' push for redistricting faces a tight legislative deadline

timean hour ago

California Democrats' push for redistricting faces a tight legislative deadline

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So far, California is the only state beyond Texas that has officially waded into the redistricting fight, although others have signaled they might launch their own efforts. California Democrats, who hold supermajorities in both chambers, unveiled the new map Friday. State lawmakers in both houses will hold hearings on the map and vote to put it to voters in a special election in November. If voters agree, the new map would replace the one drawn by an independent commission that took effect in 2022. The new map would only take effect if Texas or another Republican-led state moves forward with their own mid-decade redistricting and would remain through the 2030 elections. Democrats said they will return the map-making power to the commission after the next census. The current effort is to save democracy and counter Trump's agenda, they said. State Republicans vowed to legally challenge the effort, arguing that voters in 2010 already voted to remove partisan influence from how maps are drawn. State lawmakers are contending with how to balance meeting the state's climate goals with lowering utility and gas prices. Those discussions have been colored by the planned closures of two oil refineries that account for nearly 18% of the state's refining capacity, according to air regulators. The Legislature will have to respond to those concerns when it debates whether to reauthorize the state's cap-and-trade program, which is set to expire in 2030. The program allows large greenhouse gas emitters to buy allowances from the state equivalent to what they plan to emit. Over time, fewer allowances are made available with the goal of spurring companies to pollute less. A large portion of revenues from the program goes into a fund that helps pay for climate, affordable housing and transportation projects. The program also funds a credit that Californians receive twice a year on their utility bills. Newsom wants lawmakers to extend the program through 2045, commit $1 billion annually from the fund for the state's long-delayed high-speed rail project and set aside $1.5 billion a year for state fire response. Many environmental groups want the state to update the program by ending free allowances for industrial emitters, ensuring low-income households receive a higher credit on their utility bills, and ending or strengthening an offset program that helps companies comply by supporting projects aimed at reducing planet-warming emissions. Lawmakers will vote on a host of proposals introduced in response to the escalation of federal immigration crackdowns in Los Angeles and across the state. That includes legislation that would make it a misdemeanor for local, state and federal law enforcement officers to cover their faces while conducting official business. The proposal makes exceptions for officers wearing a medical grade mask, coverings designed to protect against exposure to smoke during a wildfire, and other protective gear used by SWAT officers while performing their duties. Proponents said the measure would boost transparency and public trust in law enforcement while also preventing people from trying to impersonate law enforcement. Opponents, including law enforcement, said the bill would disrupt local undercover operations without addressing the issue because California doesn't have authority over federal agents. Another proposal would require law enforcement to identify themselves during official business. State Democrats are also championing several proposals that would limit immigration agents without warrants from entering school campuses, hospitals and homeless or domestic violence shelters. A first-in-the-nation state task force released a report in 2023 with more than 100 recommendations for how the state should repair historic wrongdoings against Black Californians descended from enslaved people. The California Legislative Black Caucus introduced a reparations package last year inspired by that work, but the measures did not include direct payments for descendants, and the most ambitious proposals were blocked. The caucus introduced another package this year aimed at offering redress to Black Californians. One of the bills would authorize universities to give admissions priority to descendants of enslaved people. Another would ensure 10% of funds from a state program providing loans to first-time homebuyers goes to descendants. A third would allow the state to set aside $6 million to fund research by California State University on how to confirm residents' eligibility for any reparations programs. Some reparations advocates say the proposals fall short. They say many of the measures are ways to delay implementing one of the task force's key recommendations: direct compensation to descendants of slavery.

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