Key players include President Trump, the Trump Administration, federal agencies (tasked with clause implementation and decentralized enforcement), the Federal Acquisition Regulatory (FAR) Council (to amend FAR within 60 days via deviations and later rulemaking), Office of Management and Budget (OMB, for compliance guidance), and Department of Justice (DOJ, for potential FCA actions building on its May 2025 Civil Rights Fraud Initiative).[3][5][6][8][9][12] It affects all federal contractors/subcontractors, with prime contractors liable for subcontractor violations.[7][8][11]
This builds on EO 14173 (January 21, 2025), which revoked prior affirmative action orders, required certifications against “illegal DEI,” and prompted litigation (e.g., Fourth Circuit's March 2025 ruling allowing key provisions).[3][4][5][7][8] The 2026 EO escalates by adding specific clauses, timelines (60-day FAR guidance by May 25; 120-day agency reviews by July 24), and multi-agency enforcement to curb costs passed to government from “unethical/illegal” DEI.[1][3][6][9]
Newsworthy due to its aggressive 30-day rollout amid ongoing DOJ enforcement trends and qui tam risks, signaling intensified scrutiny on federal contracting (a massive market), potential legal challenges to executive authority/First-Fifth Amendment issues, and prime contractors' urgent need to revise policies/subcontracts.[5][6][8][12] Issued just days before April 3 reporting, it heightens compliance burdens as agencies prepare modifications.[7][9]