T-Mobile Ends DEI Programs Amid FCC Approval Push for Major Deals
T-Mobile US announced on Wednesday that it is terminating its diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) programs as it seeks approval from the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) for two significant transactions. In a letter to FCC Chair Brendan Carr, made public the same day, T-Mobile confirmed it is ending all DEI-related policies “not just in name, but in substance.”
The wireless carrier will eliminate any individual roles or teams dedicated to DEI, remove all DEI references from its websites, and strip DEI content from employee training materials. FCC Chair Carr welcomed the move, calling it “another good step forward for equal opportunity, nondiscrimination and the public interest.”
T-Mobile is awaiting FCC clearance to acquire most of regional carrier United States Cellular’s wireless operations, including customers, stores, and 30% of its spectrum assets, in a $4.4 billion deal. The FCC is also reviewing a separate deal where T-Mobile plans to form a joint venture with investment firm KKR to acquire internet service provider Metronet, which serves over 2 million homes and businesses across 17 states. T-Mobile intends to invest approximately $4.9 billion for a 50% stake in the joint venture and full ownership of Metronet’s residential fiber operations upon closing.
However, the decision has drawn criticism from FCC Commissioner Anna Gomez, a Democrat, who called T-Mobile’s move “a cynical bid to win FCC regulatory approval” and accused the company of mocking its stated commitments to fighting discrimination and promoting fairness.
This is not the first time the FCC, under Chair Carr, a Trump appointee, has linked approval of telecom mergers with the dismantling of DEI programs. In May, the FCC approved Verizon’s $20 billion acquisition of Frontier Communications’ fiber-optic assets after Verizon agreed to end its DEI initiatives following an FCC investigation. Earlier in the year, Carr also opened a probe into Comcast’s promotion of DEI programs.
The rollback of DEI efforts follows former President Trump’s executive orders in January aimed at dismantling government-backed DEI programs and pressuring private companies to follow suit.

