HomeNewsOpinionAttacks on Baltimore's Mayor are just racism in disguise

Attacks on Baltimore's Mayor are just racism in disguise

What is motivating the backlash against diversity, equity and inclusion efforts is so apparent it almost feels foolish to point out. But we do ourselves no favors if we can’t say the obvious

March 28, 2024 / 18:26 IST
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Baltimore Mayor Brandon Scott is qualified for the job. (Source: Bloomberg/Getty Images)
Baltimore Mayor Brandon Scott is qualified for the job. (Source: Bloomberg/Getty Images)

Something ugly is unfolding in the anti-DEI movement. More and more governors across the US have banned diversity, equity and inclusion from schools and other places serving the public places and using it as a bogeyman to justify government censorship in the classroom. High-profile critics such as billionaire hedge fund investor Bill Ackman and entrepreneur Elon Musk have called DEI “racist and illegal” and “immoral.”
Those on the political right who attack DEI have come up with their own version of the acronym: “Didn’t Earn It.” It’s the encapsulation of a false narrative that has long plagued diversity efforts — a narrative that people from underrepresented groups are generally unqualified, and that to get ahead, they require a thumb on the scale.

For a particularly egregious example, we can — of course — turn to X, the social media sight formerly known as Twitter and currently owned by Musk. After a Baltimore bridge collapsed in horrific fashion early Tuesday morning, a user with more than 275,000 followers posted a video of Mayor Brandon Scott thanking first responders and calling for prayers for the families who lost loved ones. “This is Baltimore’s DEI mayor commenting on the collapsed Francis Scott Key Bridge,” the user wrote. And then, chillingly, added: “It’s going to get so, so much worse. Prepare accordingly.”

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In case you’re utterly confused, let me spell it out for you: Scott is Black. The clear implication is that Scott, by virtue of his Blackness, is unqualified for his job. DEI opponents argue that they’re not so much anti-diversity as pro-meritocracy. The not-so-subtle implication — increasingly said out loud — is that women and minorities just aren’t qualified. Diversity, the “anti-woke” crowd claims, results in lowering standards for the sake of equality.

It’s simply not true, and Scott is a perfect example. He is a former city council president (a role to which he was unanimously elected by his colleagues) and before that chaired the National League of Cities’ Large Cities Council. His stint on the city council started in 2011. In 2020, he beat out more than 20 other Democrats to clinch the party’s nomination for mayor. In the general election, he won some 70 percent of the vote. He earned it.