A new executive order on DEI discrimination for federal contractors was signed by President Trump, and if you're in HR, recruiting, or compliance, you need to know what it actually means for your organization.
Here's what's different about this one: it's not just a policy statement. The executive order signed on March 26, 2026, creates a mandatory contract clause that will appear in your federal contracts by April 25, 2026. That clause comes with real consequences — including contract termination, debarment, and False Claims Act liability — for you and your subcontractors.
This guide breaks down what the order requires, who it applies to, what DEI activities you may want to review, and what your team needs to do before the first deadline hits.
If you've been following the Trump Administration's DEI actions since January 2025, you might be wondering what makes this one different.
Previous executive orders revoked Executive Order 11246 and directed federal agencies to wind down DEI programs. These were significant policy shifts, but without a direct contractual enforcement mechanism. The March 26, 2026 order changes that. It creates a mandatory contract clause, which will be included in your federal contracts, turning DEI compliance into a binding legal obligation with real consequences for noncompliance.
The order, titled Addressing DEI Discrimination by Federal Contractors, applies to FAR contracts — those governed by the Federal Acquisition Regulation. Grants and cooperative agreements are not covered.
Earlier executive orders used the phrase "unlawful DEI" without defining it. This one does.
Under the order, "racially discriminatory DEI activities" means disparate treatment based on race or ethnicity in:
Hiring, recruiting, and promotions
Vendor and contracting decisions
Training, mentoring, and leadership development programs
Educational opportunities, clubs, associations, and similar contractor-sponsored programs
That last category is broad enough to capture employee resource groups, affinity networks, and mentorship programs — depending on how they're structured and who may participate. One notable omission: the order does not address sex-based discrimination .
This order creates a contract clause — which means noncompliance is now a breach of contract. That opens the door to termination, debarment, and False Claims Act liability, which we cover in the enforcement section below.
The core mechanism of this order is a new contract clause, which binds federal contractors to six obligations.
By accepting a covered federal contract, you agree to:
Not engage in any racially discriminatory DEI activities as defined by the order
Furnish all information, records, and account access required by the contracting agency to verify compliance
Accept that your contract may be cancelled, terminated, or suspended — in whole or in part — for noncompliance
Report any subcontractor conduct you know or reasonably should know may violate the clause, and take remedial action when directed
Notify the contracting agency if a subcontractor sues you and puts the validity of this clause at issue
Three deadlines are built into the order:
| Deadline | Requirement |
| April 25, 2026 | Agencies must insert the new clause into all covered contracts |
| ~May 25, 2026 | FAR Council must issue interim guidance (60 days from signing) |
| ~July 24, 2026 | Each agency head must report compliance to the White House (120 days) |
The April 25 deadline is the most immediate. If you have contracts coming up for renewal or new solicitations in the pipeline, expect to see this clause appear soon — if it hasn't already.
Noncompliance with the new contract clause gives the contracting agency authority to cancel, terminate, or suspend your contract and declare your organization ineligible for future government work.
This is the enforcement mechanism that deserves the most attention.
The order explicitly states that compliance is "material to the Government's payment decisions" — the legal trigger for False Claims Act (FCA) liability. In plain terms: submitting a payment claim while knowingly violating the clause exposes your organization to significant civil penalties, federal investigation and whistleblower claims.
This order doesn't assign enforcement to any single agency. Instead, each contracting agency independently enforces the clause for its own contracts, with OMB providing overarching guidance. That's a significant departure from the EO 11246 era, when the OFCCP was the single compliance enforcement body for federal contractors. In 2026, enforcement pressure can now come from your contracting agency, the DOJ, the EEOC, or a whistleblower.
The April 25 deadline is close. Here's what your team needs to prioritize.
Review any program that could constitute disparate treatment based on race or ethnicity. The highest-risk areas:
Hiring or promotion processes with demographic targets
Mentorship or leadership development programs restricted by race or ethnicity
ERGs or affinity networks that limit participation based on protected characteristics
The test for each program is straightforward: does it treat people differently based on race or ethnicity? If the answer is yes (or even maybe) it needs a closer look.
This order does not affect your outreach obligations for veterans and individuals with disabilities. Those requirements remain in effect. Outreach to these groups is not only permitted, it's required.
Contracting agencies can request access to your records at any time. Make sure you can demonstrate that hiring and employment decisions are merit-based, outreach efforts are documented, and subcontractor reviews are on file. If your compliance records aren't audit-ready today, that's the highest-priority item on your list.
The new order adds subcontractor monitoring, certification requirements, and FCA exposure on top of existing VEVRAA and Section 503 obligations that haven't gone away. Managing all of that manually while keeping documentation audit-ready at all times is a significant lift for any HR or compliance team.
One of the best ways to demonstrate merit-based, nondiscriminatory recruiting is broad, well-documented outreach. JobTarget automates this across required channels (state job banks, job boards targeting veterans and people with disabilities) and collects proof of delivery automatically.
Post once, and JobTarget handles distribution and stores the documentation you'll need for three years. When your contracting agency requests access to your records, everything is already in one place.
Learn more about JobTarget's Compliance Suite >
The March 26 executive order on DEI discrimination raises the stakes significantly for federal contractors. It's not a policy statement — it's a contract clause with real enforcement teeth. Noncompliance can mean contract termination, debarment, and False Claims Act liability.
The compliance landscape will keep evolving as OMB publishes its high-risk sector guidance and the FAR Council issues interim rules.
Review your recruitment programs with your legal team to ensure compliance with the new Order.