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James Uthmeier

NFL Hasn't Responded To Florida Attorney General On Rooney Rule, But He Has Choice Words For Goodell

Apr 9, 2026 @ 7:40am
FootballNFLJacksonville JaguarsMiami DolphinsTampa Bay Buccaneers
OutKick

Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier says he still has not received an official response from the NFL after he put the league on notice that the Rooney Rule violates the Florida Civil Rights Act, but he did push back on Commissioner Roger Goodell's suggestion he is trying to change the league's values."I don't think this is about values," Uthmeier told OutKick and Fox News in an exclusive interview on Wednesday. "I think it's about the law. You know, we are not a racist people. I do not believe the NFL is a racist organization. When you look at the composition of the players and the contracts altogether with staff, you have a majority minority organization. So this notion that they need to kneel down and apologize is wrong. They need to follow the law." The NFL's hiring practices, in part guided by the Rooney Rule, which was instituted in 2003 and has been expanded multiple times, came under Uthmeier's scrutiny when he sent a letter to the league outlining why he believes it violates Florida law — thus affecting the Jacksonville Jaguars, Miami Dolphins, and Tampa Bay Buccaneers.Uthmeier sent a letter to Goodell, which the NFL acknowledged it received. He also sent a copy of that letter to the ownership of the three Florida teams.Goodell's initial response at the NFL annual meeting when asked what the NFL would change as a result was, "One thing that doesn't change is our values."Beyond that sound bite, the league has not responded even as the May 1 deadline Uthmeier set for a response approaches."No official response, no, sir," Uthmeier said, adding that "is a little surprising." And what happens after May 1 if the league decides this matter isn't worthy of an official response or that its Rooney Rule is just fine as written?"We will likely, in short order, I mean, I'm always willing to have conversations. We'll hear arguments," Uthmeier said. "If they can make the case that this doesn't violate Florida law, I'll certainly listen to it. But we feel pretty confident that it does violate the law, and then we will likely soon thereafter file a complaint in Florida state court." The NFL previously told OutKick the Rooney Rule "does not mandate hiring decisions and "those decisions are made by each club." By saying this, the league is highlighting that the Rooney Rule does not violate any hiring practice laws.But are interview practice rules that favor one race over another illegal in Florida?"I do believe it's illegal, but you noticed they focused on the interview angle," Uthmeier said. "They didn't even address the other two parts of the rule that do explicitly have racial hiring quotas for some of the other positions. They didn't address the awarding of draft picks if you check some of these DEI boxes. "You can't provide advantages in the employment space that you're denying to somebody else. So I mean, if you have a situation where, let's say, you want a black coach, you know who you want. You see the candidate and he's the best. There's no rule that says, well, you still got to go interview two white guys. That, to me, is the example that shows how, even in the interview space, this is unlawful. The other two, and I noticed they didn't comment on, you know, the other position. That is a quota."Art Rooney, a surviving namesake of the Rooney Rule, told reporters at the annual meeting that "everybody is in favor of the Rooney Rule" and there was no discussion about getting rid of it.That seemingly sends a message: Uthmeier is in for a legal battle with the NFL."Seems that way," Uthmeier said. "You know, there are still some meetings in time ahead. I assume they're talking to counsel about their legal exposure. And, you know, if they've got lawyers that are reading the law the way we are, I'm sure somebody's telling them it might be wise to apply this differently in Florida or possibly carve out some aspects of the rule. But if they choose not to, again, we believe under Florida's civil rights laws that their employment practice is illegal, and we will bring civil action."The NFL recently altered its Accelerator Program, which originally was designed to put minority head coach and general manager candidates in settings where they could meet NFL owners. Those opportunities to get in front of people doing the hiring were only offered to minorities, but after pausing the program in 2025, the league says it will restart the program this year in a reimagined format. Now white men are allowed to participate after being previously excluded.Uthmeier says that is "progress."But, he adds, there is more work to do, and he doesn't mind ending the Rooney Rule to make an example of the NFL."I think it's come to an end," he said. "We do see a shift in corporate America. We've seen a huge shift to get away from ESG and DEI and things that aren't focused on doing business, that are not focused on profit, but are instead focused on a socialist agenda that people aren't paying for, that shareholders aren't approving. "When people buy stock in a company, they want to see returns. They don't want to see socialist, Marxist ideology … The endgame, for me, would be to have the rule repealed. And this goes beyond the NFL. I mean, is this impacting a huge number of the work force in Florida? 'It's not, but it's the bigger picture that when the NFL is carrying on this very public, racially discriminatory employment practice, it sends a message to everybody in the country, other employers and employees that this is OK, and it's not. It's unconstitutional. We'd like to see it repealed and send a message to other corporations out there that people need to be hired based on merit."

Read moreNFL Hasn't Responded To Florida Attorney General On Rooney Rule, But He Has Choice Words For Goodell

NFL DEI Initiatives Such As Rooney Rule And Accelerator Program Under Legal Pressure And Even In Retreat

Mar 30, 2026 @ 7:37am
FootballNFLPittsburgh Steelers
OutKick

PHOENIX — NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell has repeatedly shared his opinion that diversity makes the NFL stronger and that has been enshrined in the engineering of the league's Diversity, Equity and Inclusion policies for decades. But it's a new day and the NFL's two highest-profile DEI hiring initiatives are being challenged or even significantly changed as part of the new times.The league has already altered its Accelerator Program, which originally aimed to identify and advance minority coaching and executive talent by placing them in front of league owners.The program, which started in 2022 until it was paused in 2025, excluded white male potential job candidates from participating.The new Accelerator Program, which is scheduled for May, will include white male candidates.This is seen by some as a victory for inclusion because it will include everybody. And it's seen as a rollback of minority advancement by others."Not everyone likes the change," one NFL executive admitted during the NFL Annual Meeting. "But, frankly, there were dissenting voices about the way the program was previously imagined because there were calls to have a program inclusive of all talent."The redesigned program is an evolution for us as a league."  And while the Accelerator Program is ¨refinining¨ its nomination criteria to include white men, the league confirms it is in receipt of a letter from Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier that is challenging the long-established Rooney Rule and the Accelerator Program as to their applications in Florida."We are reviewing the letter," NFL executive vice president Jeff Miller said. "We believe our policies are consistent with the law and reflect our commitment to fairness, opportunity, and building the strongest possible teams."Yes, there will be lawyers collecting billable hours soon. Uthmeier wrote his letter to Goodell last week, claiming both the Rooney Rule and Accelerator programs violate Florida law."I write with a word of caution to the NFL on its race-and-sex-based hiring policies," Uthmeier said in his letter. "As applied in Florida, the NFL's "Rooney Rule," which governs the hiring of certain team executives and coaches, brazenly violates Florida law."The NFL told OutKick on Sunday that ¨The Rooney Rule is one part of a broader set of efforts to expand opportunity and ensure clubs are considering a wide range of qualified candidates. It does not mandate hiring decisions. Those decisions are made by each club.¨But Uthmeier quoted The Rooney Rule itself as evidence the Rooney Rule violates the Florida Civil Rights Act in that it aims ¨to increase the number of minorities hired in head coach, general manager and executive positions.¨The NFL also mandates ¨that all teams must employ a female or minority coach as an offensive assistant.¨ The Florida Civil Rights Act, in part, prohibits "discriminat[ing] against any individual with respect to compensation, terms, conditions or privileges or employment" because of the individual's "race, color, religion, sex, pregnancy, national origin, age, handicap, or marital status."So, the rule's aim seems to run counter to Florida law.The Florida law also prohibits employers from discriminating based on those same characteristics "in admission to … any program established to provide apprenticeship or other training."The "other training" part may be problematic for the NFL because the Rooney Rule is meant, at minimum, to give interview repetitions for minority candidates, which could be considered training.The NFL had 10 head coach openings during the last hiring cycle. Robert Saleh, who is of Lebanese descent, was the only minority candidate hired. No black coaches were hired.  "We do have an obligation to make sure that our policies comply with the laws, whatever the law is, and whatever the changes in law might be," Pittsburgh Steelers owner Art Rooney II, the chairman of the league's DEI committee and son of Dan Rooney, for whom the Rooney Rule is named, recently told ESPN. "We've got to look at that and make sure we're in compliance. When the league's lawyers have a chance to analyze it to determine what it is about Florida law that the attorney general is questioning, we'll have to review that. That's just the environment we're existing in today."It seems the Steelers are comfortable in that environment. When the club lost black head coach Mike Tomlin to apparent retirement after the 2025 season, Rooney hired Mike McCarthy, who is white.

Read moreNFL DEI Initiatives Such As Rooney Rule And Accelerator Program Under Legal Pressure And Even In Retreat

Florida AG shockingly calls for NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell to repeal Rooney Rule

Mar 28, 2026 @ 1:35pm
FootballNFL
ClutchPoints

Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier has called on NFL commissioner Roger Goodell to repeal the league’s Rooney Rule, raising legal concerns just weeks before the 2026 NFL Draft in Pittsburgh from April 23–25. Uthmeier announced the move in a video posted Wednesday on X, formerly known as Twitter, confirming that his office sent a formal […] The post Florida AG shockingly calls for NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell to repeal Rooney Rule appeared first on ClutchPoints.

Read moreFlorida AG shockingly calls for NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell to repeal Rooney Rule

Florida Is Going After The NFL Over ‘Racist’ Rule

Mar 27, 2026 @ 7:35pm
FootballNFLPittsburgh Steelers
Total Pro Sports

The NFL could face a new legal battle.

Read moreFlorida Is Going After The NFL Over ‘Racist’ Rule

Florida Attorney General Wants NFL to Suspend Rooney Rule

Mar 26, 2026 @ 12:57pm
FootballNFL
Front Office Sports

The Rooney Rule encourages teams to interview diverse coaching and executive candidates. The post Florida Attorney General Wants NFL to Suspend Rooney Rule appeared first on Front Office Sports.

Read moreFlorida Attorney General Wants NFL to Suspend Rooney Rule

Florida attorney general James Uthmeier demands NFL scrap Rooney Rule and claims it is ‘discrimination’

Mar 26, 2026 @ 7:38am
FootballNFLJacksonville JaguarsMiami DolphinsTampa Bay Buccaneers
The Sun Sport

FLORIDA attorney general James Uthmeier has called on the NFL to scrap the Rooney Rule. Named after former Pittsburgh Steelers owner Dan Rooney, the rule was first brought in by…

Read moreFlorida attorney general James Uthmeier demands NFL scrap Rooney Rule and claims it is ‘discrimination’

Florida AG Blasts NFL Rooney Rule As 'Discrimination,' Threatens Legal Showdown In Letter To Roger Goodell

Mar 25, 2026 @ 6:05pm
FootballNFL
OutKick

Florida's Attorney General James Uthmeier wrote a letter to NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell, imploring the league to nix its Rooney Rule.

Read moreFlorida AG Blasts NFL Rooney Rule As 'Discrimination,' Threatens Legal Showdown In Letter To Roger Goodell

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