DEI Bureaucrat Watch List

DOSSIER

A quick summary of DEI offenses

Marion Allen

Salary:
$172,075
Grade:
GS-14
Food and Drug Administration
DEI Manager, Office of Criminal Investigations

Marion Allen's

Partisan Political Activities

-Obama for America, 2008, $250

-Biden for President, 2019-2020, 4 $25 donations totaling$100

-Warnock for Georgia, $25 (7/22/20), $12.50 (1/2/21)

-DSCC, 2020, 6 donations totaling $135

-DSCC, 2021, $25

-DNC, 1/2/21, $12.50

-DNC, 11/3/24, $25

-Harris for President, 7/21/24, $25

-Democratic Voters PAC, 7/16/24, $40

(Source)

Marion Allen's

Notable Financial Relationships

Marion Allen's

Notable Prior Employment History

-FDA, Employee Engagement Program Manager, Human Foods, Jan2025-present

-FDA, DEI Manager for Office of Criminal Investigations(Remote), Sept. 2024-present

-Blacks in Government Region XI Council, Regional Director, Jan 2021-present

(Source)

FDA Employee Asking the Lord to “Handle” Republican Senators

Marion Allen might be a champion for equity and inclusion at the FDA, but she certainly doesn’t seem to care about including Republicans in that vein.

After the Senate rejected the For the People Act, a sweeping federalization of elections—a bill that included a ban on voter ID, automatic and same-day voter registration, and restrictions on free speech—Ms. Allen took to Facebook to vent. In one post, she asks the Lord to “handle them,” saying they got by, but not away. In another, she singles out Tim Scott, presumably because he is the only black Republican Senator.

Asking for retribution because of a vote is radical and unacceptable from a government employee.

(Source)

Marion Allen Marching for Voting Rights

Marion Allen alerted some of her Facebook friends to a March for Voting Rights in D.C. sponsored by Just Democracy. The post laments “voter suppression bills threatening our right to vote.” Exactly who is losing their voting rights?  

As background, Just Democracy advocates for radical ideas like abolishing the electoral college, eliminating the filibuster, expanding the Supreme Court, and D.C. Statehood.