Another corporate giant turns its back on inclusion. Accenture, once a leader in workplace diversity, has decided to “sunset” its DEI goals, citing changes in the U.S. political climate. In an internal memo, CEO Julie Sweet confirmed that diversity targets, set in 2017, will no longer guide hiring and promotion.

This move follows a disturbing trend. Meta, Alphabet, and Amazon have already backed away from DEI commitments in response to Donald Trump’s executive orders dismantling diversity programs. Now, Accenture joins the exodus, abandoning the very values that made it a progressive employer.

For the queer community, this decision is more than disappointing—it’s dangerous. Without clear DEI policies, marginalized employees lose vital protections and opportunities. Corporate “neutrality” is never neutral; it enables discrimination to creep back into hiring practices and workplace culture.
Accenture will also stop submitting diversity data to external watchdogs, making it even harder to hold them accountable. The company insists it remains committed to an inclusive culture, but without concrete goals, those words ring hollow.
Queer professionals and allies must push back. We deserve workplaces that celebrate diversity, not just tolerate it. Accenture’s retreat from DEI isn’t just a corporate decision—it’s a signal that our rights are up for debate. And we cannot afford to stay silent.
You may also like
-
Mpox in Brussels: staying vigilant without giving in to panic
While mpox (formerly “monkeypox”) seems to have disappeared from the headlines, the virus is still
-
Sing It Queer: Brussels needs volunteers to welcome 4,000 LGBTQI+ singers
In June 2026, Brussels will host Various Voices, the big European festival of LGBTQI+ choirs,
-
Expressions Mixtes 3: Brussels gets a festival where queer stories refuse to fit in one box
Every June, Brussels quietly grows a new kind of Pride: one made of dance floors,
-
European Testing Week: turning testing into queer self‑care
If Pride is about visibility and joy, European Testing Week is about something just as vital: making
-
“Baimenik Gabe”: the trans man under Jorge Sevilla’s brush opens Madrid Pride’s queer art route
Madrid is getting ready for Pride season, and this year one of the first signals
