Mayo Clinic rebrands woke DEI initiatives to dodge Trump’s ban



The Mayo Clinic is rebranding its diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives as “belonging,” following President Donald Trump’s executive order prohibiting all such DEI-related programs.

On Inauguration Day, Trump signed an executive action “Ending Radical and Wasteful Government DEI Programs and Preferencing,” banning the “illegal and immoral discrimination programs” within the federal government. The administration warned it would pull federal funding, including grant awards, from entities that continue implementing DEI-related initiatives despite the ban.

'In keeping with this focus and recent national events, we’re embracing an opportunity to accelerate Mayo Clinic’s belonging journey to reflect our culture of collaboration and respect and support positive patient experiences.'

Trump’s action appears to have prompted some companies, including the Mayo Clinic, to effectively cancel the acronym while potentially keeping the same goals under a new name.

U.S. Rep. Nancy Mace (R-S.C.) responded to the clinic’s actions.

“They aren’t fooling anyone! DEI is DOA [dead on arrival],” Mace declared in a post on X.

On Thursday, the Minnesota Star Tribune reported that the Mayo Clinic is undergoing a “renaming” effort, including changing its DEI office to the “Office of Belonging.” Additionally, staffers with DEI-related titles will be referred to as “Belonging” employees. It noted that the clinic’s website would also be updated to reflect these changes.

A webpage on the Mayo Clinic’s Office of Belonging states that its “vision is to create a global environment of empowered belonging.”

“This requires building an environment of psychological safety, making Mayo Clinic a place where people from all backgrounds, cultures and experiences can access the best healthcare and where all staff can bring their authentic best selves,” it continues. “Equity is embodied in every aspect of Mayo Clinic, from the individuals who constitute it to the organization as a whole.”

The clinic admitted that the move was prompted by “recent national events.” Yet, Trump’s executive order banning DEI initiatives also clearly prohibits such rebranding and masking efforts.

It reads, “The Director of the Office of Management and Budget ... shall coordinate the termination of all discriminatory programs, including illegal DEI and ‘diversity, equity, inclusion, and accessibility’ (DEIA) mandates, policies, programs, preferences, and activities in the Federal Government, under whatever name they appear.”

While not under the federal government, the nonprofit medical group has received $500 million over the past two years from the National Institutes of Health. According to USASpending.gov, the federal government has provided more than $4.4 billion to the Mayo Clinic since 2008.

Minnesota Star Tribune reported that the medical group did not respond to questions concerning whether any jobs would be impacted, and it is unclear whether any functions will be changed.

Andrea Kalmanovitz, the Mayo Clinic’s director of media relations, told the news outlet, “Mayo Clinic’s commitment against racism remains.”

“Since 2020, Mayo Clinic has intentionally focused on belonging as a cornerstone of staff wellbeing,” Kalmanovitz stated. “In keeping with this focus and recent national events, we’re embracing an opportunity to accelerate Mayo Clinic’s belonging journey to reflect our culture of collaboration and respect and support positive patient experiences.”

Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!

Mayo, Cleveland Clinic, And Other Major Hospital Systems Put White People At Back Of Treatment Lines

Patients and their families should reject programs that undermine individualized medicine in favor of racially balanced outcomes.

Appeals Court Restarts Lawsuit Against Mayo Clinic’s Covid Jab Mandate

The ruling opens the door for scores of employees to pursue damages for Mayo’s alleged abuse of religious freedom.

FACT CHECK: Viral Post Mayo Clinic ‘Quietly Admits’ On Its Website Hydroxychloroquine Is A Treatment For Covid-19

The Mayo Clinic website has had that about the medicine and COVID-19 on its page about hydroxychloroquine since at least September 2020

From heroes to zeroes: Mayo Clinic cans 700 unvaccinated workers



Remember the good ol' days when the people on the front lines of the coronavirus pandemic in our nation's hospitals were hailed as heroes for their selflessness?

We saw signs regularly hailing the efforts and self-sacrifice of nurses, doctors, first responders, essentially anyone even tangentially associated with health care.

Hospitals even had "Heroes Work Here" signs posted outside their front doors for the adoring public to see and offer prayers of thanks for the greatness and selflessness of these people who were willing to take a risk to care for those of us who might have caught the COVID bug.

Good times.

Paul Frangipane/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Those days are apparently long gone at the world-famous Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota.

The medical center said Tuesday that it had fired 700 of its employees for not getting vaccinated against COVID-19 by the Jan. 3 deadline, WCCO-TV reported.

According to the Minneapolis Star Tribune, workers had until Monday to get their first shots or get a medical or religious exemption approved. Mayo officials claimed that they had granted the majority of exemption requests.

Those fired workers make up about 1% of the company's workforce, the outlet said. That's 1% of the workforce at the state's largest employer.

The Star Tribune said that Mayo Clinic officials asserted that the vaccine requirements were "necessary to provide the safest possible environment" at the facility that treats people from around the world for a host of complex and unique concerns.

"Based on science and data, it's clear that vaccination keeps people out of the hospital and saves lives," Mayo claimed in a statement, WCCO reported. "That's true for everyone in our communities — and it's especially true for the many patients with serious or complex diseases who seek care at Mayo Clinic each day."

No word from the clinic about vaccinated but infected workers spreading COVID to patients, which the Center for Disease Control and Prevention has admitted can happen, saying on its website, "CDC expects that anyone with Omicron infection can spread the virus to others, even if they are vaccinated or don’t have symptoms."

But there's good news for those onetime front-line heroes: They can return to Mayo to fill future openings to care for the sick if they get vaccinated, despite having cared for the same sick patients while unvaccinated for nearly two years.

So there's that.

COVID Databases Are Among Us, And The Right Must Fight And Win Now — Or Never

So what can politicians do to protect their citizens from being coerced into experimental medical procedures and surveillance databases they aren't comfortable with?