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Texas Appoints Higher Education Ombudsman to Enforce DEI Violations

The change is part of a recently passed law that could potentially limit classes based on ‘leftist ideologies’ and focus on skills needed in the job market.
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Texas Appoints Higher Education Ombudsman to Enforce DEI Violations
A student sits in a lecture hall while class is being dismissed at the University of Texas in Austin on Feb. 22, 2024. Brandon Bell/Getty Image
Darlene McCormick Sanchez
Darlene McCormick Sanchez
Senior Reporter
10/21/2025|Updated: 10/21/2025
0:00

Texas is moving to enforce bans on diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) practices in universities and potentially restrict college courses focused on gender and race.

The move reflects an effort by the Trump administration and red states to reshape higher education by steering it away from what they deem to be left-wing ideologies.

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott announced the appointment of Texas’s first higher education ombudsman, Brandon L. Simmons, on Oct. 16 as part of state Senate Bill (SB) 37, which became law on Sept. 1.

Abbott has accused some educators of spreading political ideologies instead of supporting basic education.

In an Oct. 19 post on X, Abbott said a University of Texas professor was dismissed from an administrative position overseeing university academic affairs because of ideological differences.

​“Texas is targeting professors who are more focused on pushing leftist ideologies rather than preparing students to lead our nation,” he wrote. ​“We must end indoctrination and return to education fundamentals at all levels of education.”

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​The announcement follows broader national efforts to move higher education from progressive ideologies that the Trump administration said created discrimination and undermined meritocracy, with President Donald Trump issuing executive actions and threatening to cut funding over DEI practices.

Similarly, while states such as Texas, Florida, Alabama, and North Dakota have passed laws against DEI hiring practices in higher education, some universities have resisted the changes required by these laws.

Texas SB 37 reshapes governance in public higher education by moving authority on certain hiring and curricular decisions from faculty to governor-appointed boards. The law enables university regents to reject courses they find misaligned with state workforce needs, a main objective of the new approach.

Texas state Rep. Matt Shaheen, a Republican who sponsored the House version of the bill, told The Epoch Times via text that while regents in other states have some authority over the hiring process, SB 37 gives regents the direct ability to approve or deny hiring.

“We’ve seen ridiculous courses at some of our universities that don’t add any value and exist for indoctrination purposes only. I passed SB 37 to stop these childish courses,” he said.

The ombudsman office can investigate DEI practices banned under SB 17, passed in 2023, as well as issues related to SB 37. Also, it can recommend funding cuts for violators, directly affecting compliance and institutional resources.

SB 17 prohibited DEI offices, training, and programs in Texas colleges and universities. It also barred institutions from using hiring practices based on such things as race or sex, instead of a neutral process.

Amid these changes, Texas has scrutinized core curriculum, majors, and minors for their emphasis on race and LGBT issues, some of which have captured the public’s attention.

​In September, Texas A&M University President Mark A. Welsh III quit following a viral video in which a student confronted a professor in class over the legality of teaching a gender identity lesson in a children’s literature class.
​On Oct. 18, Riley Gaines, an athlete who advocates to stop male athletes from competing in women’s sports, posted a course list at Texas State University on X that grabbed more than 1 million views. The list included courses such as Black Queer Experience and Global Issues in Diversity.

“Charlie Kirk was right. College is a scam,” she wrote.

​Supporters say the office will increase accountability, while others disagree.

​The Texas AFT, a teachers union, called it government overreach that will drive away talented professors and students.

In a statement, the union called the law the first of its kind in the nation, granting unprecedented authority to politically appointed governing boards over university operations.

​The union group stated that the law amounts to censorship, potentially reducing academic freedom and limiting professors’ ability to teach analytical thinking by imposing “political control over curriculum, majors, minors, and certificates.”

​However, others said that universities have allowed an “activist agenda” to take priority over educational needs.

​Sherry Sylvester, a public policy expert at the Texas Public Policy Foundation, a conservative think tank, testified at an SB 37 hearing this spring that there are a large number of race and gender courses that aren’t part of a foundational education.

​She said that in the course catalog at the University of Texas, the word gender appeared 400 times in course titles, the word race appeared 200 times, and the word identity appeared 175 times.

​“To show the lack of balance, the Federalist Papers and the Declaration of Independence both appeared less than 10 times in course titles,” she said.

​More concerning was that race and gender classes could be used to meet requirements in courses such as math, according to Sylvester.

​“For example, a class entitled Numbering Race or Measuring Inequality can be used to fulfill a core mathematics requirement like differential calculus or statistical literacy,” she said.​

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Darlene McCormick Sanchez
Darlene McCormick Sanchez
Senior Reporter
Darlene McCormick Sanchez is an Epoch Times reporter who covers border security and immigration, election integrity, and Texas politics. Ms. McCormick Sanchez has 20 years of experience in media and has worked for outlets including Waco Tribune Herald, Tampa Tribune, and Waterbury Republican-American. She was a finalist for a Pulitzer prize for investigative reporting.
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