Florida attorney general subpoenas NFL over Rooney Rule and DEI hiring practices

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Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier subpoenaed the NFL on Wednesday after the league failed to provide a satisfactory response to the Republican official’s concerns about diversity hiring practices.

At the heart of Florida’s scrutiny against the NFL is the Rooney Rule. The rule sets an interview quota for coaches from minority groups, requiring every team to interview at least two external candidates from underrepresented groups for head coach, coordinator, and general manager jobs.

In late March, Uthmeier demanded that the league suspend the diversity hiring policy and asked for a response by May 1. NFL lawyer Ted Ullyot responded to the attorney general’s request by then, but the league did not eliminate the policy or its diversity hiring programs.

“My office appreciates the NFL’s stated commitment to equal opportunity and nondiscrimination,” Uthmeier wrote in a new letter. “We also appreciate how quickly the NFL changed its website in response to our letter, as well as the NFL’s assertion that it no longer requires the consideration of race or sex in the hiring of at least one offensive assistant.”

“Unfortunately, neither your letter nor the changes to your website assuage our concerns over the NFL’s violations of Florida law,” he said. “In fact, they raise new ones.”

Uthmeier argues the Rooney Rule violates Florida law because it gives preference to one race over another, which he said is wrong, illegal, and unnecessary.

The subpoena orders the league to appear at the Florida attorney general’s office in Tallahassee on June 12 at 9 a.m., Fox News and OutKick reported.

The subpoena effectively pressures the state’s three professional football teams — Jacksonville Jaguars, Miami Dolphins, and Tampa Bay Buccaneers — not to apply the league’s diversity hiring practices for top jobs.

NFL COMMISSIONER STANDS BY ROONEY RULE AND DIVERSITY DESPITE FLORIDA ATTORNEY GENERAL PRESSURE

The NFL has not made a public statement about the subpoena, but its leader did defend the Rooney Rule and similar policies after the attorney general’s initial letter.

“One thing that doesn’t change is our values, and we believe in diversity and its benefit to the National Football League,” NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell said. “We are well aware of the laws and where the laws are changing and evolving. We think the Rooney Rule is consistent with those, and we certainly will engage with the Florida AG or anybody else as we have in the past to talk about our policies.”

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