Rolls-Royce has become the latest major UK-headquartered company to pull back from diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) initiatives, citing the need to comply with anti-DEI legislation in the United States — a move influenced by growing pressure from President Trump’s White House.
The FTSE 100 aerospace and defence group, which employs 43,000 staff globally, has informed employees that it will cut funding and internal support for its employee inclusion networks, such as Prism, its LGBTQ+ group. While employees can continue to meet informally, the groups will no longer receive corporate backing, have a presence on the company intranet, or be allowed to promote events within company premises.
The changes were communicated last month by Natasha Whitehurst, head of diversity, inclusion and belonging, and Adam Riddle, head of North America operations. They also confirmed the launch of a new “employee voice network”, open to all employees and designed to replace identity-specific groups.
Rolls-Royce said the decision was taken to ensure compliance with recently introduced anti-DEI legislation in the US, where 6,000 employees and a third of the company’s £19 billion revenues are based. The company holds major defence contracts with the US government, including engine production for military aircraft such as the C-130 Hercules and B-52 bomber fleets.
In a statement, a Rolls-Royce spokesperson said: “We support all our colleagues to be at their best, ensuring we live by our behaviours and drive a culture of high performance and engagement. We regularly review our policies and approach to ensure we achieve this outcome, while complying with all legal requirements in the jurisdictions in which we operate.”
Support authors and subscribe to content
This is premium stuff. Subscribe to read the entire article.