IBM Just Wrote a $17 Million Check Admitting Their DEI Hiring Program Was Illegal the Whole Time

For over a decade, the entire Fortune 500 herd has been running the same scam on the American workforce — slap a DEI label on racial and gender quotas, put them in the employee handbook, and then gaslight anyone who pointed out that this is the exact thing the Civil Rights Act made illegal. This week, IBM became the latest Fortune 500 company to learn that judges are allowed to read the law too.

The verdict: a $17 million settlement, right in the company’s fourth-quarter earnings. Ka-ching.

The suit alleged that IBM’s ‘diversity, equity, and inclusion’ hiring quotas functioned as straight-up racial discrimination. IBM had been measuring their hiring by race and gender, setting targets, and holding managers accountable to those targets. In other words, the company decided up front how many of each kind of person they wanted to hire, and then filled those buckets accordingly.

That’s called a quota. Quotas are illegal. This is not new information. The Supreme Court has been crystal clear about this since 1978.

But ‘quota’ is such an ugly word, isn’t it? So the HR-industrial complex did what the HR-industrial complex always does — they rebranded it. ‘Representation goals.’ ‘Pipeline metrics.’ ‘Equity targets.’ ‘Inclusion benchmarks.’ For 10 years, every HR department in America swore up and down that none of this was a quota, cross our hearts, and also here’s a $12,000 consulting invoice.

Now a courtroom has looked at the paperwork and ruled otherwise.

What makes this one especially delicious is that IBM spent years bragging about exactly the metrics that just got them sued. They published DEI reports. They ran ad campaigns. Their executives went on cable news and talked about ‘accountability’ in DEI. They gave speeches at Davos about how their hiring numbers by race were improving year over year. They turned it into a marketing strategy.

And now those same metrics are Exhibit A in the federal court case they just paid $17 million to make go away.

Unbelievable.

This is what happens when an entire industry spends a decade telling itself that the rules don’t apply. The law in this country has been clear since before most of these HR consultants were born. You cannot hire people based on their race. You cannot refuse to hire people based on their race. You cannot set numerical targets for employees by race. The fact that you said the word ‘equity’ before doing it does not create some kind of magic legal shield.

But the entire corporate class went along with the gag. Why? Because it was fashionable. Because BlackRock had an ESG scorecard. Because the activist class on social media would scream at any CEO who didn’t get with the program. And because, for a while, nobody was willing to sue. So every big company just kept playing along, convinced that since everybody was doing it, nobody could possibly get in trouble.

Enter the Trump DOJ. Enter Ed Blum. Enter state attorneys general who actually read the Constitution.

Now the suits are coming. Slowly at first, and then all at once. Starbucks settled one last year. Target has exposure on multiple fronts. Major law firms quietly walked back their race-based summer associate programs the day after the Students for Fair Admissions ruling. Now IBM is cutting a check. And every general counsel in America just got a very uncomfortable email from outside counsel that starts with ‘We need to talk about your hiring metrics.’

Good. Finally.

There’s an entire generation of American workers who got passed over for jobs because they had the wrong skin color or the wrong chromosomes. We’re talking about real people — engineers, analysts, sales reps, project managers — who were told to their faces that they weren’t what the company was ‘looking for this cycle.’ Some of them were the most qualified candidates in the stack. Some of them had built their whole careers betting on the promise that this country rewards merit.

And HR departments, sitting in their glass-walled offices, were laughing at them on the way to the next ‘unconscious bias’ training.

The $17 million number matters, but it’s not the real story. The real story is that the legal theory has been tested in open court and it lost. The fig leaf has been pulled off. ‘DEI isn’t quotas’ was a lie, and the plaintiffs’ bar now has a playbook to prove it. Every Fortune 500 company that spent the last decade measuring hiring by race just became a target.

We told you this was bonkers, right?

The cleanup is going to be expensive. Companies that thought they were getting ahead of the culture war by aggressively tilting their hiring pipelines are about to discover that the culture has moved, the law didn’t, and the bill has come due. Expect more settlements. Expect more suits. Expect a lot of quiet executive orders at major corporations killing the DEI programs they used to publish press releases about.

And expect the consultants who charged seven figures to set those programs up to suddenly have no memory of their previous work.

For those of us who spent years watching this absurdity metastasize through every American institution — the hospitals, the law firms, the airlines, the fire departments — this is the sound of the correction. Slow, expensive, years too late, but finally happening. The merit system is coming back, one class-action settlement at a time.

IBM’s $17 million is just the down payment. There’s a lot more coming. A whole lot more.

Get the popcorn.


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