IBM to pay $17 million to settle US government probe over DEI

The logo of IBM is seen during the Adopt AI International Summit at the Grand Palais in Paris, France, November 26, 2025. REUTERS
WASHINGTON, (Reuters) – IBM has agreed to pay $17 million to settle a U.S. government ​probe over the firm’s diversity, equity and inclusion practices, ‌which President Donald Trump’sadministration has cracked down on during his second term in office.
The settlement marks the first resolution from ​the U.S. Department of Justice’s unit formed last year ​called the “Civil Rights Fraud Initiative” to crack down ⁠on DEI policies using a civil anti-fraud law.
Trump has targeted public ​and private organizations – from government agencies to private universities – over ​DEI practices that civil rights advocates say help address historic inequities for marginalized groups like women and ethnic minorities.
In a settlement,signed by the ​DOJ and IBM, the U.S. government alleged that IBM’s practices ​included using a “diversity modifier” that “tied bonus compensation to achieving demographic targets,” ‌among ⁠other claims.
The settlement also said IBM terminated or modified various programs and policies, but that the company denied engaging in unlawful conduct.
“This agreement is neither an ​admission of liability ​by IBM ⁠nor a concession by the United States that its claims are not well-founded,” the ​agreement said.
The White House casts DEI ​as anti-merit ⁠and discriminatory against groups like white people and men. Trump has signed executive orders asking federal contractors and subcontractors to eliminate ⁠DEI.
​Many U.S. companies scaled back ​or modified diversity policies after Trump’s orders.

Reporting by Kanishka Singh and Jasper ​Ward in Washington; editing by Michelle Nichols and David Gaffen

 

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