Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy says his predecessor, Democrat Pete Buttigieg, did not focus the department on safety but rather spent valuable resources and time pursuing frivolous diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI)-aligned policies. Speaking on Sunday with Jake Tapper, Duffy criticized Buttigieg and the Biden government for prioritizing the renaming of roads they claimed had racist connotations and mandating gender-neutral changes to terms common parlance terms like “cockpit” and “airmen.”
“So I do know that, in the last administration, they were focused on not safety, but they were focused on changing the name from cockpit to flight deck, or notice to airmen, they want to change it to notice to air mission,” Sec. Duffy said after Tapper pressed him on whether DEI policies had any part in the tragic air collision that killed 67 individuals in Washington, D.C. last week. He continued: “They focused on E.V.s and sustainability and ‘racist’ roads, things that don’t matter in regard to safety.”
“Our mission since the start has been safety, and they have lost that mission. And we see, when you don’t focus on safety and you focus on social justice or the environment, bad things happen.”
Sec. Duffy also announced plans to evaluate the impact of DEI initiatives on the Department of Transportation (DOT) and the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA). According to Duffy, following this assessment, a comprehensive report detailing potential effects on aviation safety will be released.
The National Pulse reported in January 2024 that the Biden government had prioritized the recruitment of individuals with “severe” intellectual and psychiatric disabilities for roles at the FAA, which oversees airline regulation and safety, as part of its diversity hiring.
Notably, the agency has faced several lawsuits over its hiring policies, which saw a number of highly qualified individuals rejected because they were white males.