Image 01 Image 03

Feds Sue Minnesota Over Discriminatory ‘Affirmative Action Regime’

Feds Sue Minnesota Over Discriminatory ‘Affirmative Action Regime’

Minnesota requires state agencies to “justify” and receive approval before hiring employees who are not female, black, Hispanic, Asian, Pacific Islander, American Indian, or Alaskan native.

As if Governor Tim Walz’s Minnesota weren’t already in enough hot water, the U.S. Department of Justice has just sued the state for unlawful employment discrimination based on race and sex.

The federal government’s lawsuit challenges Minnesota law requiring all state agencies to balance the race and sex of their workforces with the relevant civilian labor market, effectively creating a statewide affirmative action regime in violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.

“Minnesotans already had to see their state officials let criminals brazenly walk off with over a billion taxpayer dollars,” said U.S. Attorney Daniel N. Rosen for the District of Minnesota. “Now they see those same officials abusing their power by systematically and unlawfully branding jobseekers as the wrong race or sex.”

Under Minnesota law, “to eliminate the effects of past and present discrimination” on the basis of “protected group status,” state agencies must consider “affirmative action goals” when hiring staff and personnel. “Protected groups” are defined as “females, persons with disabilities, and members of the following minorities: Black, Hispanic, Asian or Pacific Islander, and American Indian or Alaskan native.”

However, according to the lawsuit filed Wednesday in the U.S. District Court for the District of Minnesota, the state identifies no prior or present discrimination to support its race and sex-conscious employment policies.

Minnesota agencies hire their staff and personnel under the watchful eye of the Minnesota Management and Budget, the agency overseeing the statewide affirmative action program. To ensure their compliance, agency heads must submit affirmative action “progress reports” to the MMB. If they failed to hire enough employees with the right skin color and sex chromosomes, they must explain why. They risk a report to the governor if they fall short for two years in a row.

But there is apparently room for leniency in the evaluation process. Agencies can score DEI brownie points by developing “other innovative ways to promote awareness, acceptance, and appreciation for diversity and affirmative action.” Those initiatives will be considered when evaluating the agency’s compliance with affirmative action requirements, according to the lawsuit.

The DOJ complaint alleges that Minnesota, as an employer, discriminates against state employees and prospective employees on the basis of race, color, national origin, and sex in violation of Title VII by requiring state agencies to “justify” and receive approval before hiring employees who are not female, black, Hispanic, Asian, Pacific Islander, American Indian, or Alaskan native.

“Because staffing is a zero-sum game,” the lawsuit states, “when Minnesota gives preferences to employees or prospective employees on the basis of their race, color, national origin, and sex, it inevitably and necessarily discriminates against other employees or prospective employees because of their race, color, national origin, and sex” (emphasis added).

The DOJ asks the court to block the state’s race- and sex-conscious staffing and personnel practices and declare them in violation of Title VII.

There is solid Supreme Court precedent for doing so. In its landmark Students for Fair Admissions v. Harvard decision, the Court put an end to race-based affirmative action in college admissions—and by implication elsewhere, Professor Jacobson wrote at the time. With this latest lawsuit against Minnesota, the unlawful race- and sex-based discrimination in employment done in the name of affirmative action could soon meet the same end.

 

 

DONATE

Donations tax deductible
to the full extent allowed by law.

Comments

Sickening.

Minnesota state agencies must justify and receive approval before hiring employees who are not female, black, Hispanic, Asian, Pacific Islander, American Indian, or Alaskan native.

Interpretation by Paula: Hiring white men is a no no.

I find this to be much like the case for those who support abortion. If a time machine were invented so that everyone who supports abortion could be transported back in time to their mother’s womb and be aborted, no one would want to go.

Likewise, the white men who passed this law would not be willing to give up their positions and be replaced by a Black, Latino, Alaskan native or Pacific Islander.

Estimated Pool of Unemployed Degree Holders:

Group/Unemployed & Looking

White Females/10,000 – 12,000
Blacks/1,800 – 2,200
Asians/1,600 – 2,000
Latinos/ 900 – 1,200
Pacific Islanders/15 – 40
Alaska Natives/6 – 18

This data underscores the challenge mentioned in the January 14, 2026, federal lawsuit: for groups like Pacific Islanders and Alaska Natives, the pool of qualified applicants is so small that “balancing” a state workforce of over 50,000 based on these specific categories is statistically impossible

    Paula in reply to Paula. | January 15, 2026 at 4:21 pm

    Even if the State of Minnesota hired every single unemployed, degree-holding person from the “underrepresented” minority groups mentioned, it would still not achieve the demographic “balance” currently sought for a workforce of 57,000 employees.

      CommoChief in reply to Paula. | January 15, 2026 at 8:40 pm

      Better yet demand State enforcement not across the public sector workforce but within each separate Agency/Department. There’s gonna be significant over representation of females in areas like Education or Health Care compared to the total workforce population of MN. Same in reverse for the Veterans department and State Military Dept and probably State Troopers. Heck I’d wager the clerks/staff at the typical MN DMV office doesn’t look like the adult population demographics of the State.

Estimated Pool of Unemployed Degree Holders:

Group/Unemployed & Looking

White Females/10,000 – 12,000
Blacks/1,800 – 2,200
Asians/1,600 – 2,000
Latinos/ 900 – 1,200
Pacific Islanders/15 – 40
Alaska Natives/6 – 18

This data underscores the challenge mentioned in the January 14, 2026, federal lawsuit: for groups like Pacific Islanders and Alaska Natives, the pool of qualified applicants is so small that “balancing” a state workforce of over 50,000 based on these specific categories is statistically impossible

I see all this piling on, every day a new lawsuit, and I feel like Flounder: “Oh boy… is this GREAT!”

I’m almost sorry for Tim. This really should be happening to Biden, Schumer, Pelosi, Bragg, Letitia. But meanwhile, Tim will do fine.

I bet Kammy is thanking her lucky stars that she isn’t actually in charge of anything… and to be honest, never was.

    CommoChief in reply to henrybowman. | January 15, 2026 at 6:56 pm

    Yeah it seems to be a strategy to overwhelm MN with legal/political challenges, but in fairness these actions from the Feds ain’t coming out of nowhere, they all have a reasonable basis. Tough cookies.

      irishgladiator63 in reply to CommoChief. | January 15, 2026 at 8:30 pm

      Exactly. If you don’t want to be sued by the Trump administration for blatant discrimination, don’t blatantly discriminate.

Perhaps part of the reason Minnesota is in such a mess, is this hiring process has eliminated a significant portion of the population that understands what it’s doing. When you hire people on the basis of outward appearance, only, it’s no wonder things get messed up.

    CommoChief in reply to B. | January 15, 2026 at 9:50 pm

    Much of it comes from fear of lawsuits. When employers, even public employers, as a practical matter, had to eliminate or water down their testing of applicants they substituted the credential of a College Degree as a proxy.

    That led to multiple bad outcomes. First too many people seeking a degree they didn’t really need/want but had to have b/c getting a job required it. That demand pushed up prices for education. Then when the % of college grads became so high and the colleges had reduced their own standards at undergraduate level the employers raised the bar. Now the proxy for ‘this person can pass a test’ become an MA/MS. So people spent another 18-24 months earning another degree they didn’t want or need, which raised graduate education costs due to demand and b/c so many of these students didn’t have the same academic rigor in their undergraduate program the univ had lower standards in graduate education.

    We’ve got hugely inflated costs for college education that leaves a huge % of students in substantial debt paying for watered down academic programs that they don’t really want/need but even with them they don’t have the skills, attributes, knowledge or training to enter the workforce using the overpriced degree. In large part b/c a court decided that tests were discrimination.

Maybe if Tampon Timmy weren’t so vested in fraud, he wouldn’t act so stupid.