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Braun ends race and gender based preferences in Indiana contracts

Gov. Mike Braun announced Wednesday July 15 he would end the state’s gender and sex based preferences for businesses, following a legal decision from Attorney General Todd Rokita.
Benjamin Thorp
/
WFYI
Gov. Mike Braun announced Wednesday July 15 he would end the state’s gender and sex based preferences for businesses, following a legal decision from Attorney General Todd Rokita.

Gov. Mike Braun announced Wednesday he would end some contracting preferences for women and minority owned businesses. The move follows a determination by Attorney General Todd Rokita that the practice was unconstitutional.

Rokita found that parts of the state’s Diversity Business Enterprises and Minority and Women’s Business Enterprises programs were unconstitutional because they favored some contractors based on sex and race.

“This blatantly illegal program singles out some Hoosiers for disfavored treatment purely because of their sex or the color of their skin, and it insults other Hoosiers by suggesting they cannot compete on a fair playing field. The program is both un-American and unconstitutional,” Rokita said in a statement.

The decision comes after the Indiana Department of Administration requested the Attorney General’s office to review the legality of the state’s race and gender based contract requirements last year.

Rokita’s finding would overturn a 1983 statute creating requirements for minority and women participation in state contracts. The state’s current goals are that, on average, 10% of state contracts are with women-owned businesses and 8% are with minority-owned businesses.

Rokita pointed to the 2023 Supreme Court decision, Students for Fair Admissions, as evidence that racial preference programs can rarely be justified by the Constitution and that Gov. Braun could decline to implement an unconstitutional statute.

“Our Constitution mandates equal protection under the law, because a system where the government picks winners and losers on the basis of race or sex can never be fair,” Braun said in a statement. “Indiana has replaced divisive, politically-charged programs with a focus on Merit, Excellence, and Innovation: a level playing field where every single Hoosier has the chance to get ahead with hard work.”

Braun’s release indicates he plans to announce a new small business initiative to help Indiana businesses compete for state contracts.

The Attorney General is advising the Indiana Department of Administration on a lawful transition away from its current practices. Rokita said he would work with the General Assembly to repeal the underlying statute.

State Democrats were quick to push back on the announcement, calling it “bad public policy.”

“If Governor Braun believes portions of Indiana law should be changed to better reflect evolving constitutional precedent, he should come to the General Assembly and ask us to amend the statute,” said Rep. Mitch Gore (D-Indianapolis) in a statement. “What he cannot do is unilaterally stop carrying out duties the legislature has imposed simply because his administration disagrees with the policy.”

Last year, Indiana’s Black Caucus said the governor’s efforts to remove diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives from state government sent a clear message that Braun did not care about fairness.

Chair of the Black caucus Rep. Earl Harris (D-East Chicago) also responded to the governor’s announcement.

"Gov. Braun's decision erases opportunities for Black Hoosiers, women and other minority business owners who have historically been shut out of contracting — not because they lack merit or talent, but because the system was built to exclude them,” he said.

Contact Government Reporter Benjamin Thorp at bthorp@wfyi.org

Benjamin Thorp is an enterprise health reporter for WFYI and Side Effects Public Media. Before coming to Indiana, Ben was a reporter for WCMU public radio in Michigan. His work has been heard on multiple national broadcasts, including All Things Considered and Morning Edition.