George Mason University under US federal investigation for DEI hiring policies
George Mason University (GMU), one of Virginia’s largest public universities, is facing federal scrutiny after the U.S. Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights (OCR) concluded that the institution illegally used race in its hiring and promotion practices, violating Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
The finding marks one of the most significant challenges yet to campus diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) programs in the post-affirmative action era.
How the case began
The investigation began in July 2025 following complaints by GMU professors, who alleged that the university’s DEI initiatives—rolled out under President Gregory Washington since 2020—gave preferential treatment to faculty from underrepresented groups.
These measures, they argued, crossed the line from promoting diversity to discriminating on the basis of race, something federal law strictly prohibits for institutions receiving government funding.OCR’s review confirmed those allegations. In its report, the agency pointed to policies that allowed GMU to bypass competitive hiring searches if a candidate “strategically advances the institutional commitment to diversity and inclusion.”
Even the Faculty Handbook required job offers to be cleared by the Office of Access, Compliance, and Community—a department previously known as the Office of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion.
What the government wants GMU to do
The Education Department has given GMU 10 days to accept a proposed Resolution Agreement or risk losing federal funding. The agreement isn’t just procedural—it demands a very public course correction:
- A formal apology from President Washington, acknowledging the university’s failure to comply with civil rights law.
- A clear statement to students and staff that GMU will not use race in recruitment, hiring, promotion, or tenure decisions.
- A complete review and rewrite of policies and guidance documents to remove race-based criteria.
- Annual training for everyone involved in hiring and promotion, emphasizing compliance with Title VI.
- An ongoing compliance system to track and report progress to OCR.
In short, GMU will have to dismantle the very DEI structures it once championed—or face the consequences.
Why this matters beyond GMU
This case isn’t happening in isolation. It comes in the wake of the 2023 U.S. Supreme Court ruling that ended affirmative action in college admissions, a decision that has already reshaped how universities approach diversity. Now, the GMU finding signals a broader federal crackdown on race-conscious policies in faculty hiring, something many campuses quietly adopted over the past decade.OCR’s Acting Assistant Secretary for Civil Rights, Craig Trainor, didn’t mince words.
He called GMU’s approach “unlawful” and warned that the Trump-McMahon administration “will not allow racially exclusionary practices” in education. For universities nationwide, that statement is a clear warning: policies that even appear to favor one race over another will face federal action.
What happens next
GMU has a narrow window to agree to the resolution and avoid escalating penalties. Non-compliance could lead to loss of federal funds, impacting everything from financial aid to research grants—a blow no public university can afford.For now, the campus community waits for a statement from President Washington, who must navigate a public apology while managing the fallout from years of DEI-driven hiring strategies.The GMU case marks a pivotal moment for higher education: how far can universities go to pursue diversity without breaking the law? The answer, it seems, is being rewritten—and George Mason University is at the center of that debate.