New Lawsuit Could Topple The Heart Of Race-Based Federal Programs

Dec 6, 2025 - 04:28
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A new lawsuit aims to end the government’s practice of assuming that people of certain races are “socially disadvantaged” and entitled to special benefits.

The case was brought on behalf of Revier Technologies, an artificial intelligence company that was denied a “Small Business Credit Initiative” subsidy because its owner, Matthew Schultheis, is white, and Young America’s Foundation, a conservative group that said the interns in its college program were barred from a Department of Homeland Security fellowship that relied on SBA’s “disadvantaged” classification.

Agencies across the federal government rely on a decades-old Small Business Administration designation that, according to federal regulation, automatically applies to anyone of certain races.

“The federal government’s pervasive use of race as a proxy for determining who is ‘socially disadvantaged’ — and therefore who receives contracts, grants, loans, investment capital, opportunities, and other benefits — is unconstitutional, and it must be stopped,” the suit says.

The move comes as decades-old affirmative action programs are being ruled unconstitutional one by one. Center for Individual Rights attorney Mike Petrino told The Daily Wire that his suit targets a central regulation that is relied on by at least 20 different government programs. That is the SBA’s 8(a) designation, which takes its name from a 1953 law and is fleshed out in regulations, with no significant updates since 1998.

The longstanding government rule won’t pass constitutional muster under recent jurisprudence, including a landmark Supreme Court case on affirmative action at Harvard, the lawsuit argues.

Precedent requires that racial reparations be “narrowly tailored,” but the list of races given preference under SBA regulations is not based on any data about specific groups facing discrimination in specific industries, the suit said.

“As just some examples, Uyghur heritage from Kyrgyzstan is not presumed ‘socially disadvantaged,’ but Han Chinese heritage is. Pakistanis are in; Afghans are out. And because ‘Hispanic American’ includes anyone of Spanish origin, the lineal descendants of the conquistadors are presumed socially disadvantaged.”

Courts have held that race-based programs must also have a “logical end point.” SBA has never removed a minority group from its list and “does not have criteria to evaluate whether a group should be removed from this list because it is no longer suffering the present effects of past discrimination,” the suit said.

The November 17 lawsuit, filed in federal court in Louisiana, names as defendants SBA Administrator Kelly Loeffler and Attorney General Pam Bondi. It could lead to a court ruling that would end racial giveaways in government — perhaps with a third-party group intervening to defend the practice–or to the Trump administration settling the lawsuit by changing federal rules. SBA spokeswoman Caitlin O’Dea did not return a request for comment.

The 8(a) language was written to implement a government-wide “minority contracting” program that “set aside” a percentage of all federal contracts, totaling tens of billions of dollars, for disadvantaged businesses. In 2020, Center for Individual Rights lawyers sued on behalf of a white-owned company that lost out on government contracts during the first Trump administration, alleging that the government’s tying race to “disadvantaged” status was illegal.

For decades, courts had made clear that directly race-based government programs were constitutional, and SBA claimed it skirted that issue by affording minorities only a “rebuttable presumption” that they were disadvantaged. In other words, minorities would have less paperwork to complete, but a process was still in place to ensure that, for example, the child of a Chinese billionaire wouldn’t be considered to have suffered discrimination in America.

The 2018 case exposed that this was false: A process to rebut the disadvantaged status didn’t even exist.

In July 2023, a judge issued a preliminary injunction forcing the SBA to change the way it chose which companies were “disadvantaged” for purposes of awarding government contracts. But the actual regulation was never changed, and other programs that piggybacked on it are still using it.

The Biden administration complied with the injunction by requiring potential 8(a) contractors to write victimhood essays describing how they had personally experienced discrimination in any aspect of life because of “racial, ethnic, or cultural bias within American society.”

The Department of Transportation also runs its own minority contracting program. The SBA and Transportation programs together likely make up the most lucrative race-based government programs in history. In 2021, 10% of all surface transportation money, more than $37 billion, was earmarked for “disadvantaged” companies.

But in September 2024, that program was also hit with a preliminary injunction amid claims that the program violates the Constitution’s equal protection clause, though it applied only to the companies that were parties in the case.

In May 2025, the Trump administration told a Kentucky judge it agreed that “the DBE program’s use of race- and sex-based presumptions of social and economic disadvantage … violates the equal protection component of the Due Process Clause.” Solicitor General D. John Sauer, who argues for the federal government before the Supreme Court, said he determined that his department would not defend the law.

In October 2025, the Trump administration’s transportation department enacted an interim final rule that “eliminates presumptive eligibility based on race or sex and requires applicants to submit individualized evidence of social disadvantage.”

Petrino, the lawyer suing SBA, said the young, white business owner he represents could be considered under such a process without having his race held against him. “Our client from Louisiana is from a humble background, he’s faced struggles in life, he’s socially disadvantaged.”

It is unclear how the government could objectively verify, rank, and evaluate such claims, and whether the essays will merely be a pretext that results in essentially the same outcome: Preference given to minorities who write that they are disadvantaged because of their race. SBA has not responded to questions about the essays.

The set-aside contracting scheme has led to corruption as those who secure an inside track to government contracts often morph into influence-peddlers who rent out that access to “partners” or subcontractors–non-disadvantaged firms who do much of the actual work. The ability of government officers to steer funds directly to specific companies, without competitive bidding, has also facilitated bribery.

Eliminating the existence of the set-aside programs, instead of just how they use race, would require an act of Congress, Petrino said. In the meantime, billions of dollars in government business are likely to be awarded based on essays written by business owners about their plight. The government already has a separate program reserving contracts for small businesses, the easiest and most objective way to ensure that someone is not privileged.

Last month, Loeffler, the SBA head, said a full review of the 8(a) program was underway, with an eye towards eliminating fraud. “For years, bureaucrats have turned a blind eye to rampant abuse within the contracting program for ‘socially and economically disadvantaged’ small businesses,” she wrote, referencing a Daily Wire story. “That ends now – as SBA works to complete its full-scale audit of the 8(a) Program.”

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Fibis I am just an average American. My teen years were in the late 70s and I participated in all that that decade offered. Started working young, too young. Then I joined the Army before I graduated High School. I spent 25 years in, mostly in Infantry units. Since then I've worked in information technology positions all at small family owned companies. At this rate I'll never be a tech millionaire. When I was young I rode horses as much as I could. I do believe I should have been a cowboy. I'm getting in the saddle again by taking riding lessons and see where it goes.