The Announcement That Raised Eyebrows
Acting Commissioner Lee Dudek has officially declared the Social Security Administration (SSA) will be cutting its ties with diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) programs. This move, he claims, is a direct response to President Donald Trump’s executive order: Ending Radical and Wasteful Government DEI Programs and Preferencing. (The title alone tells you everything you need to know about its intent.)
Newsweek has reached out to the SSA for a statement, but so far—silence. Perhaps they’re busy celebrating the “cost savings.”
What’s at Stake?
Let’s cut to the chase. When Trump took office, he wasted no time in putting DEI programs on the chopping block. His executive order made it clear: no more government-funded diversity initiatives, and any DEI-related roles should vanish. Private sector companies weren’t spared either. The pressure was turned up on them to “rethink” their DEI efforts, nudging them toward a more—let’s say—traditional approach.
Now, the SSA is the latest federal agency to toe the line, scrapping programs that supported research on retirement, disability, and social security policies.
The Institutions Left Hanging
For years, the SSA partnered with respected research institutions through the Retirement and Disability Research Consortium (RDRC). This included heavyweights like:
- University of Michigan
- Boston College
- National Bureau of Economic Research
- City University of New York Baruch College
- University of Maryland, Baltimore County
- University of Wisconsin-Madison
Now, these agreements are getting the axe, allegedly saving “hardworking Americans” about $15 million in fiscal year 2025. But what’s the real cost of this so-called savings?
The Bigger Picture
Let’s not pretend this is just about money. This move is part of a larger pattern—a systematic rollback of any government-backed effort to address systemic inequalities. DEI programs exist for a reason: to ensure fair representation and equal opportunity. Killing them off under the guise of “efficiency” is simply a political statement dressed up as fiscal responsibility.
Supporters of the decision argue that DEI programs waste taxpayer dollars and impose unnecessary bureaucratic layers. Critics, on the other hand, see it as yet another attack on marginalized communities, cutting off research and support systems that help shape policies for millions of Americans.
Where Does This Lead?
The elimination of these partnerships means fewer studies, fewer policy insights, and ultimately, fewer informed decisions on retirement and disability benefits. But perhaps that’s the goal—less data means fewer inconvenient truths about economic disparities and social inequalities.
For those who believe in fair policies based on research and facts, this is a significant blow. For those cheering the end of DEI initiatives, it’s a victory lap. The rest of us? We’re left wondering: what gets cut next in the name of “cost savings”?