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Florida's Attorney General James Uthmeier has subpoenaed NFL officials over minority hiring rules, claiming they violate state law. This follows Uthmeier's threats of a civil rights lawsuit regarding the NFL's Rooney Rule and similar policies.
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(Adam Hunger/AP)
TALLAHASSEE, Florida â State Attorney General James Uthmeier escalated his clash with the National Football League on Wednesday by subpoenaing league officials over minority hiring rules he argues violate Florida law.
Uthmeierâs threats of a civil rights lawsuit over the NFLâs Rooney Rule and similar policies garnered a response from league officials and pushed the NFL to soften language on its website. But Uthmeier, an appointee of GOP Gov. Ron DeSantis, said the revisions do not go far enough as he vows to keep fighting for the repeal of NFL efforts designed to expand opportunities for minority coaches and executives.
âWe appreciate how quickly the NFL changed its website in response to our letter and capitulated on some of their discriminatory hiring quotas,â Uthmeier said Wednesday on social media. âBut their response raises more questions about the Rooney Rule, and we look forward to their cooperation with the investigative subpoena we issued them today.â
The subpoenas are Uthmeierâs way of keeping pressure on the NFL after he previously gave the league a May 1 deadline to scrap the Rooney Rule and other diversity hiring protocols.
Created in 2003 by the NFLâs Workplace Diversity Committee, the Rooney Rule as it exists today requires every team to interview at least two external minority candidates for open head coach, coordinator and general manager jobs. At the same time, the policy rewards teams for developing minority staff by granting them compensatory draft picks if a minority coach or executive is hired away by another franchise.
Uthmeier claims these policies run afoul of Floridaâs longstanding civil rights laws by demanding teams limit, segregate and classify applicants for certain employment and training opportunities because of their race and sex.
NFL officials, in a May 1 letter, allegedly pushed back against some of Uthmeierâs arguments, contending the league "does not impose any hiring quotas.â But Uthmeier responded: âWe are not convinced.â
âIn the end, year after year, the NFL has bemoaned the hiring of âWhiteâ coaches rather than âcoaches of color.â" This obsession with hiring based on race is wrong,â Uthmeier wrote in a letter Wednesday to Ted Ullyot, NFL executive vice president and general counsel. âIt also violates Florida law.â
Florida's Attorney General claims the NFL's minority hiring rules, including the Rooney Rule, violate state law.
James Uthmeier is Florida's Attorney General, appointed by Governor Ron DeSantis, and he is leading the investigation into the NFL's hiring practices.
The Rooney Rule requires NFL teams to interview minority candidates for head coaching and senior football operation jobs, but critics argue it imposes discriminatory hiring quotas.
The NFL has softened the language on its website regarding diversity hiring rules following Uthmeier's letter but is facing ongoing scrutiny and subpoenas.

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NFL officials did not immediately respond to a request for comment about Uthmeierâs subpoenas. The May 1 NFL response was cited in the attorney generalâs letter Wednesday but has not yet been provided to the public. Top NFL officials, including Commissioner Roger Goodell, have publicly supported the Rooney Rule and maintain the policies help teams and the league recruit the best talent.
Uthmeier, in the letter, noted the NFL struck âmany references to ⊠unlawful âinclusive hiringâ policiesâ from its website, calling the move a positive development. But the Republican suggested the updates âraise new concernsâ under Floridaâs law enforcing deceptive and unfair trade practices. Some of the changes from the NFL, as reported by ESPN, include explaining that the Rooney Rule "expands the pool of candidates considered" instead of "aims to increase the number of minorities hired" as it did previously.
âNow you say the NFL has scrubbed those representations from its website because they do not âaccurately reflect the NFL's current programs and policies,'â Uthmeier wrote. âWhy, then, were they there to begin with?â
A civil rights lawsuit, as Uthmeier has threatened, would mount an unprecedented challenge for the NFL, putting the nationâs most popular sports league in the middle of a legal battle amid Floridaâs fight against âwokeâ policies. The efforts by Uthmeier, who is endorsed by President Donald Trump, align with the White Houseâs attempts to boost scrutiny of programs they classify as diversity, equity and inclusion.
The subpoena from Uthmeier orders NFL officials to appear at the attorney general's office in Tallahassee on June 12, according to Fox News.