DEI divide: Republicans and Democrats split on workplace diversity – USA TODAY

Posted: May 18, 2023 at 1:38 am

DeSantis tells Iowa: 'We will fight the woke' mob

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis is visiting Iowa to introduce himself to an audience of Republicans ahead of a likely 2024 presidential bid. The Florida governor is a top-tier presidential prospect viewed as a rival to former President Donald Trump. (March 10)

AP

Donald Trump has assailed diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives as has fellow 2024 GOP frontrunner Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis while the Biden administration and Democratic leaders have championed them.

As the nation's racial reckoning takes center stage in the run-up to the presidential election, those pitched culture battles are being felt in the workplace where sharp partisan divisions are emerging.

Call it the DEI divide.

Most Democratic and Democratic-leaning workers 78% say focusing on DEI at work is a good thing, according to a new survey from the Pew Research Center.Just 30% of Republicans and Republican-leaning workers felt the same.Whats more, 30% of Republicans said DEI was a bad thing.

The findings suggest that the political polarization and the party divides that we see across different realms of life also exist in the workplace, said Kim Parker, director of social and demographics trends research at Pew Research. Now that these DEI efforts and policies have become a point of national debate, those differences are getting reinforced.

'Woke capitalism' or smart business? ESG fireworks on Capitol Hill over climate change

With the nation becoming less white and more studies showing that diversity gives companies a competitive edge, corporate America has prioritized hiring and promoting more workers from underrepresented backgrounds and has embraced initiatives to make work cultures more inclusive. Those efforts dont sit well with everyone, and they have opened up fault lines in cubicles and corner offices across the country.

Strikingly, Parker says Pew Research studies examining work culture and peoples attitudes about work did not find such wide gaps by party affiliation.

So there are aspects of work that people are experiencing in very similar ways regardless of their party affiliation," Parker said. "But when it comes to this specific set of policies and initiatives, you do start to see the divisions.

'Woke mind virus'? 'Corporate wokeness'? Why red America has declared war on corporate America

About half of Democrats say working somewhere that has diversity including gender, race and ethnicity, age and sexual orientation is extremely or very important to them, but just 13% of Republicans agree.

An equal mix of men and women in the workplace is extremely or very important to 39% of Democrats but only to 12% of Republicans.

Similar divides exist on having people from different age groups (39% versus 17%) and different sexual orientations in the workplace (27% versus 7%).

Democrats are more likely than Republicans to say their workplace benefits from policies and programs focused on diverse representation and workplace inclusion. In fact, 21% of Democrats say their employer pays too little attention to DEI.

Republicans, on the other hand, are far more likely than Democrats to say their employer pays too much attention to DEI (24% versus 6%).

Democrats are more than three times as likely as Republicans to say being white makes it easier to succeed where they work (48% versus 13%) and they are more likely than Republicans to say being Black, Hispanic or Asian makes it harder.

There is also a partisan split on whether women and people of color face additional hurdles in the workplace.

Nearly half of Democrats 47% say being a man makes it at least somewhat easier to succeed at work compared with 25% of Republicans.

Democrats are also more likely than Republicans to say being a woman makes it harder to succeed (37% versus 17%).

Democratic and Republican women are more likely than men of either party to agree that being a man helps drive success.

Just 9% of Republicans say being Black makes it harder for someone to succeed compared with 39% of Democrats.

Similarly, 30% of Democrats view being Hispanic as a barrier to success versus 8% of Republicans. Smaller shares in both political parties say being Asian makes it tougher to succeed (16% versus 6%).

Read this article:

DEI divide: Republicans and Democrats split on workplace diversity - USA TODAY

Related Posts