Reed Smith Client Alerts

Key takeaways

  • Executive Order (EO) 14173 heightens False Claims Act (FCA) risk by treating compliance with federal anti-discrimination laws as material to payment decisions.
  • Justice Thomas’s concurrence in Kousisis provides a roadmap for disputing FCA claims by reinforcing that materiality requires a substantive link to the contract’s central objectives.
  • Federal contractors and grant recipients should ensure diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI)-related certifications align with EO 14173, enhance internal compliance measures, and retain records showing government awareness of ongoing DEI efforts.

EO 14173, “Ending Illegal Discrimination and Restoring Merit-Based Opportunity,” directs every federal agency to insert contract and grant language declaring that a recipient’s “compliance in all respects with all applicable Federal anti-discrimination laws is material to the Government’s payment decisions for purposes of the False Claims Act.” On its face, the clause appears to heighten FCA exposure for any federal contractor or grantee that affirmatively certifies compliance but in practice operates or funds DEI initiatives alleged to violate the EO.

Justice Thomas initially emphasized in Universal Health Services, Inc. v. United States ex rel. Escobar, 579 U.S. 176 (2016) that materiality turns not on contractual labels but on whether the alleged misrepresentation “goes to the very essence of the bargain.” The Supreme Court’s most recent discussion of materiality, however – most notably, Justice Thomas’s concurrence in Kousisis v. United States, 145 S. Ct. 1382 (2025) – provides defendants with a potentially powerful roadmap for attacking FCA claims predicated on non-economic, policy-based contract terms. Indeed, the Kousisis concurrence may shape both civil FCA litigation and parallel wire-fraud investigations for years to come.

Kousisis concerned criminal wire-fraud convictions premised on false certifications of compliance with the Department of Transportation’s Disadvantaged Business Enterprise (DBE) rules. While Justice Thomas expressed doubts that the government could satisfy the burden of proving the materiality of the DBE rules at issue, the Court did not need to decide this issue because defendants did not contest that their misrepresentations were material. Justice Thomas identified four indicia that a requirement – however expressly denominated “material” – may, in fact, be “minor or insubstantial” for FCA purposes:

  • The requirement’s substantive disconnect from the contract’s core purpose;
  • The absence of an express payment-withholding or price-adjustment mechanism tied to the requirement;
  • A consistent government practice of paying claims despite knowledge of pervasive noncompliance; and
  • The possibility that the requirement itself is unlawful or unconstitutional.