WSJ What’s News - Trump Administration Broadens Corporate DEI Crackdown
Episode Date: December 29, 2025Edition for Dec. 29. The Department of Justice launches investigations into companies including Google and Verizon over workplace DEI programs, using an antifraud law to try to advance the president�...�s political agenda. Plus, Lululemon’s founder launches a proxy fight to shake up the struggling retailer’s board. And we’ll look at the evolving security threats likely to drive defense spending in 2026 with the help of WSJ reporter Alistair MacDonald and Dragonfly’s Matt Ince. Luke Vargas hosts. Programming note: What’s News is publishing once a day through Jan. 2. Sign up for the WSJ's free What's News newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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The DOJ turns to a fraud law to target corporate DEI efforts.
Plus, Lulu Lemon's founder launches a proxy fight to shake up the struggling retailers' board
and facing new and evolving threats, Western militaries prepare to spend big on new defense technology.
We track and monitor incidents of suspected Russian hybrid warfare,
and so these are acts of sabotage, subversion, provocations, disinformation,
tax. And we've seen a significant increase. It's Monday, December 29th. I'm Luke Vargas
for the Wall Street Journal, and this is What's News in your feed once a day over the holidays
with top headlines and business stories moving the world today.
We're exclusively reporting that Google and Verizon are among the targets of Justice Department
investigations into DEI initiatives in the workplace. The civil probes are being carried out
under the False Claims Act.
While the law is typically used in health care fraud cases,
the DOJ contends that holding a federal contract,
while still considering diversity in hiring and promotions,
is in effect fraud against the government.
Google and Verizon declined to comment.
People familiar with the investigations
say the government is also looking at companies
in the auto-pharmaceutical defense and utilities industries.
I asked the journal's Lydia Wheeler
how to interpret the new investigations.
These civil probes are proceeding under the umbrella of an anti-fraud law called the False Claims Act,
which has traditionally been used to go after contractors who basically bill the government
for work that was never performed or inflate the cost of services rendered.
And attorneys I spoke with said that this is a novel use of the law
and that the False Claims Act has never been used in this way to advance a president's political agenda.
The stakes are really high for businesses.
So if a civil lawsuit is brought, the company could be on the hook to not only pay back what they made from the government in this contract, but three times the amount.
So millions of dollars we're talking about here.
The founder of Lulu Lemon, Chip Wilson, is launching a proxy fight to remake the athletic clothing company's board before it chooses a new CEO.
Wilson, Lulu Lemmon's second biggest shareholder, said today that he's nominated three director
candidates confirming an earlier report by the journal.
He said shareholders wouldn't trust a CEO picked by the current board as the athletic
apparel retailer is in an identity crisis, with sales stagnating in the U.S. and competition
rising from upstart brands.
And Wilson isn't the only one pushing for change.
Activist Elliott Investment Management has billed to more than $1 billion.
steak in Lulu Lemon and is pushing a CEO candidate, Ralph Lauren executive, Jane Nielsen.
It's copper's turn in the spotlight after silver and gold hit new price records in Friday
trading. Copper futures on the London metals exchange are on pace to notch their own record today
and are now up more than 40% this year. Journal Europe business editor Alex Frankos told me that
both long and short-term factors are driving the rise.
Copper's had an incredible year.
Part of that is the AI boom, which requires all these data centers, which require a lot of power,
which requires a lot of copper, because copper wire is so important to generating electricity
and transmitting electricity.
You then have possibility of tariffs coming into effect on copper, which would raise the price
of copper coming into the U.S.
And then in general, when interest rates are being cut, as the Fed is doing, that tends to
metals prices because investors see metals as more attractive.
They're a bit of a hedge against inflation.
I mean, it really is the year of metals.
You look at gold and silver, both had spectacular records and just surging into the end
of the year.
People are riding these things higher and pushing them higher and higher.
All right, Alex, so multiple metals closing out the year here on a high note.
We've even had stories about people buying up silver coins to try and profit off of this rally,
though it sounds like there's an effort underway to try to cool things down a bit.
People are trying to cash in on the frenzy and the prices.
They're, you know, taking in grandma's silver to the, you know, silver dealers.
And at a market level where people trade these futures contracts, that's been going on as well.
So today we have one of the biggest exchanges where contracts connected to gold and silver get traded.
The CME raised margin requirements on traders, meaning how much money they have to put down in order to trade these contracts.
the money's there in case someone doesn't deliver on one of their contracts,
and they raise the requirement to keep the exchange safer,
and that's caused prices to reverse quite a bit.
So it's a wild ride.
Stocks are slipping in early U.S. trading.
Big tech stocks, including Oracle, Tesla, and NVIDIA are leading the early losses,
though indexes remain near all-time highs.
Among today's gainers is Lulu Lemon, up around 1% at midday.
President Trump is touting progress toward ending the Ukraine war after a weekend call with Russia's Vladimir Putin and meeting with Ukraine's Volodymyr Zelensky at Marilago.
We had a terrific meeting. We discussed a lot of things. As you know, I had an excellent phone call with President Putin that lasted for over two hours. We discussed a lot of points. And I do think we're getting a lot closer, maybe very close.
Trump was light on specifics, though, and offered no signs of a breakthrough
amid Russian objections to a ceasefire and its insistence that Ukraine seed certain occupied areas
currently under Moscow's control. And today, Zelensky said differences remain over U.S. security
guarantees meant to prevent Russia from attacking Ukraine again. He says Trump has offered
15 years of guarantees, which Kiev wants at least doubled.
China staged major military exercises around Taiwan today, describing them as a stern warning against
those interfering in Chinese affairs. The drills follow this month's approval of billions of
dollars in U.S. arms sales to the island. Beijing promised more drills tomorrow.
And Thailand and Cambodia have agreed to a ceasefire to end three weeks of deadly clashes
over their disputed border. That flare up in fighting over the border and one earlier
this year were the deadliest ever in the century-old conflict. It's unclear from the text of
Saturday's truce if it will permanently end fighting, given no mention of the withdrawal of
troops. Coming up, we'll turn our focus from this year's military hotspots to the threats likely to
dominate in 2026 and drive defense spending in the process. That's after the break.
Somewhere between war and peace.
That's how Germany's Chancellor Friedrich Mertz described Europe's new reality in November
when he said we are no longer at peace with Russia.
Recently, China has also grown bolder in its approach to neighbors like Japan,
and as if to highlight this new and more aggressive reality,
the U.S. now has a rebranded Department of War.
all the while, fighting ranged on in Ukraine and for much of the year in Gaza,
battlefields that served as laboratories for military experimentation,
and developments there are likely to continue in the year to come.
Well, joining me now with more is Wall Street Journal Defense Industry Reporter
Alistair MacDonald, as well as Matt Inns, strategic intelligence manager
at geopolitical and security intelligence firm Dragonfly,
which, like the Wall Street Journal, is part of Dow Jones.
Matt, looking back at this past year, what is standing out?
terms of either the emergent threats or just changes we've seen among the world's largest
militaries that are likely to shape global stability next year and beyond.
The first thing I'd probably point to is the extent to which a growing number of global
and regional powers are increasingly prepared to use hard power.
I'd also mention hybrid warfare, and particularly within the European context, we track and monitor
incidents of suspected Russian hybrid warfare, and so these are acts of sabotage, subversion,
provocations, disinformation, cyber attacks. So last year, we saw a sixfold increase in the number
of incidents recorded compared to the previous year. And as of October this year, we've seen the
number of incidents recorded surpass that for the whole of last year. And Alistair, the Ukraine
war, has been really a laboratory of military innovation now?
Indeed, Western military tech company is a literally desperate that give their products away
to front line units and then be able to say, of course, that had been tested on the battlefield.
field. The key tech being watched closely from around the world is obviously drone warfare,
but that's in the air, land and sea, electronic warfare, by which, of course, I mean things like
signals jamming and spoofing, and air defense. And clearly what Ukraine has shown from the start
is the need for cheap mass produced drones. So it used to be that militaries had precision
and expensive missiles and mass and cheaper artillery. What drones have joined is to give both precision
and mass. And where you have cheap ways of attack, of course, you need cheap ways to defend
rather than using a pack three missile that bring down a drone. You want something a lot cheaper,
which the Ukrainians have been quite good at perfecting. Matt, the hybrid threats we're talking
about AI threats, cyber attacks. These tools are being used, as we saw here in the UK in
the last year and elsewhere to target everything from railways to retailers. So this is more
than armies that are at risk. No, that's right. And interestingly, NATO's chief.
of cyber operations came out recently and suggested that actually Russia may have actually
supported or at least provided assistance to ransomware groups that have recently conducted
attacks this year against British retailers, so Marx and Spencer's being a good example.
AI in particular is enhancing the sophistication of cyber threat actors, both state and non-state.
And so whether it's through their ability to develop malware, conduct social engineering, or even to conduct
and execute influence operations. Their ability to do so is just growing by orders of
magnitude. And that's going to continue into next year. Alistair, what do you see as far as
weapons developments go, defense tech spending at least? I'm sure we can say is going to be
high looking at Europe as an example, for instance. Yeah, that's right. I mean, Europe's set to
spend $560 billion this year, which is an immense amount given how far it had fallen from the peak
of the Cold War. In terms of predictions, where you guys were talking about AI there, I mean, I
I think that will continue to be developed.
For instance, in Ukraine, they use AI for missiles and drones, so it's not susceptible to jamming.
And I think for the Europeans, what they will very much need is better intelligence, basically.
This is something that they fail massively on, that they're relying on the US.
So more satellites out there and more airplanes.
And then also long-range missiles, this is something that Europe is not very good at.
So they'll need that.
Quite the shopping list for the world's largest militaries going.
into 2026. I've been speaking today with Wall Street Journal Defense Industry
Reporter Alistair MacDonald and Dragonflies, Strategic Intelligence Manager Matt Ince.
Alistair, Matt, thank you both so much. Thank you. Thank you very much.
And that's it for What's News. Today's show was produced by Pierre BNMA and Julie Chang
with supervising producer Tully Arbell, and I'm Luke Vargas for the Wall Street Journal.
Heads up, we'll be publishing just one show a day this week, and we'll be back with a new one
tomorrow. Thanks for listening.
I don't know.
