Apple shareholders reject ban on diversity programs

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By Curtis Bunn, NBC

Apple CEO Tim Cook at a launch event at Apple Park in Cupertino, Calif., in 2023. (Nic Coury / AFP / Getty Images file)

Shareholders of Apple voted Tuesday against dismantling its diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives, rebuffing a conservative think tank’s recommendation.

The vote at the company’s annual meeting was highly anticipated, as many major companies have dissolved their diversity programs in the wake of President Donald Trump’s executive orders forcing federal government agencies to abolish DEI programs.

But Apple did not acquiesce. Before the vote, Apple shareholders faced a proposal from the National Center for Public Policy Research, which said recent U.S. Supreme Court rulings have raised significant legal concerns about DEI programs, including an uptick in DEI-related lawsuits that led to companies scaling back or dissolving the initiatives. It contended that Apple’s DEI platform could make the company vulnerable to litigation from workers. The final tally of the vote was not disclosed.

Apple responded to the proposal in its opposition statement by saying it was “unnecessary as Apple already has a well-established compliance program and the proposal inappropriately attempts to restrict Apple’s ability to manage its own ordinary business operations, people and teams, and business strategies.”

NBC details the recent cuts to DEI programs.

Ending DEI programs that have enabled Black workers and students to succeed has hurt public image and the Black community.

More Black news.

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