The Trump administration has initiated actions to dismantle programs designed to address systemic racism and economic exclusion, impacting minority- and women-owned businesses. These moves threaten billions of dollars in funding and potentially tens of thousands of jobs.
The administration’s policies are drawing criticism from advocates who argue they will disproportionately harm historically disadvantaged communities.
The Justice Department has filed to end the Disadvantaged Business Enterprise (DBE) Program, a nearly $37 billion initiative that mandates at least 10 percent of federal transportation contracts be awarded to minority- and women-owned firms. The administration contends the program violates the Constitution’s equal protection clause, following a lawsuit from two White-owned companies. A settlement, if approved, would eliminate the DBE’s core mission of addressing historical discrimination. The Biden administration previously supported the program, asserting that race-neutral alternatives are insufficient to overcome centuries of inequality.
President Trump signed an executive order aimed at neutralizing the Minority Business Development Agency (MBDA), the sole federal agency dedicated to supporting minority-owned businesses. Under the Biden administration, the MBDA facilitated over $3.2 billion in contracts and $1.6 billion in capital for entrepreneurs of color, resulting in the creation or preservation of more than 23,000 jobs. Coupled with a recent court ruling restricting the MBDA’s consideration of race in eligibility, these actions threaten to reverse those gains.
A Kentucky judge previously issued an injunction weakening the DBE program, and the Trump administration is seeking to make that decision permanent. Courts and organizations aligned with the administration are challenging the legality of race-conscious aid, aiming to curtail civil rights progress. A coalition of minority- and women-owned business groups has petitioned the court to intervene, warning of potential collapse for many firms without DBE and MBDA protections.
Attorneys and advocates assert that these policy changes are not race-neutral but rather constitute a form of discrimination, penalizing communities that have faced generational barriers to opportunity. Businesses reliant on the DBE program are preparing for potential shutdowns, and entrepreneurs previously on a path to growth are facing exclusion. Critics contend that the administration is actively deepening inequality and that communities of color will bear the consequences.
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