U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) Chair Andrea Lucas sent a letter to the leaders of the Fortune 500, reminding them about the commission’s intent to investigate diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) policies, programs, or practices it finds discriminatory.
In her Feb. 26 message to CEOs, board chairs, and general counsel, the EEOC chair said she sought to make them aware of the agency’s technical assistance documents addressing race and sex-based discrimination in employment and remind them of their obligations under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act.
The letter also said the EEOC is committed to “fully utilizing all statutory tools to fulfill the Commission’s mission,” including litigation.
Lucas wrote that over the past few years, U.S. equal employment opportunity principles “have been under attack by movements and ideologies that elevate group rights over individual rights; demand equal outcomes over equal treatment and equal opportunity; and, most absurdly, twist our nation’s civil rights laws to promote discrimination against certain races or groups, rather than protect all Americans equally and evenhandedly.”
Toolkit: SHRM’s BEAM Toolkit for I&D
The agency regained a quorum after the U.S. Senate confirmed Brittany Panuccio as a commissioner in October 2025. Observers expect the commission to search for potential charges from workers who seek to challenge DEI at their employers.
In December 2025, Lucas issued a message encouraging white, male workers who believe they have faced discrimination to file charges with the agency.
“The EEOC is committed to identifying, attacking, and eliminating ALL race and sex discrimination — including against white male employees and applicants,” Lucas wrote on X.
While Title VII’s underlying text has not changed, the legal framework governing discrimination claims is evolving, especially in light of recent U.S. Supreme Court decisions that are focusing on the text of Title VII to render decisions.
That inlcudes the Supreme Court’s recent unanimous decision in Ames v. Ohio Department of Youth Services, which settled a circuit split and held that plaintiffs from majority groups — those who are not traditionally believed to be disadvantaged — need not overcome artificial procedural barriers to obtain Title VII’s protections against discrimination.
HR leaders are advised to audit their I&D programs to ensure they are legally compliant, workplace unifying, and business accretive, so they can protect the organization and ensure opportunities for all employees.
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