HACKER Q&A
📣 pault

Are “Social Justice” questions in job interviews legal?


My roommate is currently interviewing with a consulting firm, and in the third round of interviews he was explicitly asked which social justice movements he supports. He said it was really out of the blue (no pun intended) and caught him off guard. He said something vague about BLM, and in the followup meeting the company brought it up again, saying something to the effect of "we agreed on that, so that's good."

Is this even legal? I was really shocked when he told me about this. I personally would have been really uncomfortable talking about identity politics during a job interview, even though I'm about as liberal as they come. It certainly sounds as if he had expressed any reservations about the social justice movement he wouldn't have passed the interview.


  👤 osazuwa Accepted Answer ✓
People here are saying it's a red flag. I'm not so sure.

I don't think it's smart for the company. Just like I didn't think it was smart for Thiel to ask "Star Wars or Star Trek?" as a shibboleth for political leanings at Paypal. You are going to filter good people.

However, I think it might serve you. Being a closet conservative in a liberal culture sucks. Being a closet liberal in a conservative culture sucks. At the end of the day, you want to not have your work-life suck.

I'm black. Spent a while living in Southeast Asia. Once, I was going to meet a landlord about renting an apartment and a white friend tagged along. Got there, the landlord was like "Oh. Sorry, no blacks." I was like "Okie doke." My friend was outraged on my behalf. I told him, "That's bad. You know what else is bad? Figuring out your landlord is a bigot only after you've signed a year lease because it was illegal to just say 'no blacks' up front. At least now I only had 10 seconds of shit instead of a year."

Sometimes it's nice when people put their cards on the table. It might not be a good thing for society or for business, but at least you know what you're dealing with.


👤 coldtea
Think it from their side.

They don't give two shits about blacks, LGBTQ, Republicans, or Democrats.

But they have a nice business going.

If they hire someone with the wrong thoughts and voting patterns, they might say something wrong, and it might cause ire and focus into the company from angry people on social media.

Sure, they'll fire the person pronto, but why go through the hassle?

It's better to ensure that whatever a new hire says (while on the job, or on his own social media, or even at his spare time), willd not offend the side that has the political / cancel clout atm. If fascism came to power tomorrow, they'd switch to questions like "Do you fully and wholly support the opression of minorities?" to hire you.

So, it's just good business. And if they're also ideologues that hate concervatives? To them that's a win-win!

Oh, and the people in charge of "company culture" or some such shit non-job need to find something to do, don't they?

Plus, it gives the company "progressiveness" points to use on some presentations, news articles, etc ("Why, of course we have a employee sensitiveness education program").


👤 BitwiseFool
As far as I know political affiliation is not a protected class so they're "allowed" to ask such questions. However asking such things seems really chilling and you shouldn't have to declare your ideological allegiances in a job interview.

And, in practical terms, not endorsing said social justice movements probably makes you immediately suspect to the hiring managers. After all, why wouldn't you endorse such just causes? What happens if you endorse them halfheartedly?

This makes me extremely nervous about polarization.


👤 RegnisGnaw
By your comment "Do you vote Republican?", I'm assuming you are in the US. Then the answer is likely yes.

Federally, the US EEOC has a page listing the "Prohibited Employment Policies/Practices" (https://www.eeoc.gov/prohibited-employment-policiespractices). It makes no references to political orientation or social causes.

Also its not covered under the "Civil Rights Act of 1964" as well.

Certain states have protection against job discrimination for public employees based on political affiliation which would cover your "Do you vote Republican?". However as you said its a consulting firm, so not applicable.

NOTE: IANAL, my SIL does HR and that was her quick answer.


👤 rvz
Well as you know, that's what is called a 'cultural fit' test and they choose those questions. Oh well.

Welcome to the start of the woke interview games.


👤 908B64B197
> Is this even legal?

Legal or not, it's a huge red flag.


👤 LinuxBender
I am not a lawyer and this is not legal advise, but in most countries including the U.S. it is not illegal to ask for a persons political affiliation. It is not advisable to do this however as it can lead to discrimination lawsuits.

👤 easyas101110110
I would say "It's best to keep politics and any potential activism private, even if we happen to agree, out of a respect for professionalism."

👤 minimaxir
It's not a good question to ask in an interview, but political affiliation is a not a protected class (except maybe in California, it's confusing).