"They're Ruining Lives": Federal Workers Angry Over 'DEI Watchlist' Website

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Federal workers across US health agencies say they are nervous and on edge after a conservative group published more than 50 of their names and photos on a website that at one point described them as "targets." The so-called "DEI watchlist," registered in November, triggered alarm among civil servants as it gained traction amid President Donald Trump's efforts to purge the government of positions and programs related to diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI).

The website -- which initially described the workers as "targets" -- now displays "dossiers" for workers it claims have promoted such initiatives, most of whom are Black and women.

The group behind it, the nonprofit American Accountability Foundation, says it plans to add another 40 names on Tuesday.

One federal worker profiled by the site said they were concerned for their safety when a colleague alerted them to the list and its tipline.

"First, it was a little bit of fear," the person, who requested anonymity for security reasons, told AFP.

"Is my life about to change forever? Then, I think it turned into a bit of anger."

Georges Benjamin, executive director of the American Public Health Association, said he felt "dismayed" to see the website named mostly people of color who are not major policymakers, including friends he said have gone "absolutely silent."

"It shocks me, hurts me, makes me afraid for my friends," he told AFP. "They're ruining lives."

He said the use of photos was especially troubling and likened it to the harassment faced by Ruby Freeman, a Georgia elections worker falsely accused of fraud in 2020 who later received millions of dollars after filing defamation lawsuits.

"People have done this kind of doxxing before, and it puts people at physical risk."

DEI offenses

Each worker's page contains their name, photo, job title and other publicly available information under the headline: "A quick summary of DEI offenses." Those "offenses" include donating to Democrats and using pronouns online. They also include posting -- or interacting with -- messages supportive of Black Lives Matter or critical of Trump.

One person's "dossier" highlights how she liked a LinkedIn post from a connection who contributed to a book on race.

Another was singled out for helping people sign up for the Affordable Care Act during an internship roughly a decade ago. A third had updated their Facebook profile picture during the coronavirus pandemic to say: "Stay Home Save Lives."

One of the few white people included is listed for a prior role with the Environmental Defense Fund, a nonprofit environmental advocacy group.

The federal worker who spoke to AFP said many people featured on the website focus on issues of health equity, such as offering mobile health screenings in low-income neighborhoods.

The American Accountability Foundation has previously published lists of workers at other agencies, such as the Department of Homeland Security, where it identified officials it accused of hindering efforts to secure the border.

Last year, the group received a $100,000 grant from the Heritage Foundation, which produced the controversial Project 2025 memo laying out a vision for Trump's administration.

Spokesperson Yitz Friedman rejected concerns that the new "DEI watchlist" could endanger workers as a "false premise," saying the fears are "based on a hypothetical."

He said his team have themselves received threats since the launch of the website.

"We simply reviewed public information," Friedman told AFP, saying the group created the site to "expose" government workers who push "extreme, left-wing, racist ideologies."

But the federal worker who spoke to AFP said they heard that some others on the list had pizzas anonymously delivered to their homes last week, an act the person described as "a message to say, 'We know where you live.'"

More than a dozen of the workers named appear to have deleted their LinkedIn profiles. One wrote on Instagram that he scrubbed his bio because he was "being harassed."

The "DEI watchlist" is now the top result Google returns when searching some of the workers names, an AFP analysis found. 

The worker told AFP they consulted a lawyer, filed a hate crime complaint with a state attorney general and alerted lawmakers and the NAACP civil rights group.

The FBI has also been contacted, they said.

"We are even more dedicated now to staying in our jobs and fighting back," the person said, adding that the "DEI watchlist" is "creating our class-action lawsuit for us."

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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