The Trump administration has taken a significant step towards undermining workplace protections for millions of Americans. The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), the federal agency responsible for enforcing anti-harassment laws, has voted to revoke its existing guidelines on what constitutes workplace harassment and how to address it.
The move is part of a broader effort by President Donald Trump's administration to scale back labor protections and create an environment that fosters harassment and discrimination in the workplace. The EEOC's new stance will leave millions of workers vulnerable to harassment, including women, people of color, LGBTQ+ individuals, and those with disabilities.
Under the leadership of Trump-appointed chair Andrea Lucas, the EEOC has already watered down its guidance on harassment in 2025, removing sections related to sexual orientation and gender identity. The new vote further erodes protections for all protected groups, including racial harassment, age-based discrimination, and sex-based harassment.
The consequences of this decision will be severe. Workplace harassment can have devastating personal impacts, causing lasting economic harm to employees by stunting their life-time earnings, undermining their upward mobility, and even prompting them to change careers entirely. Employers will also feel the effects, with low morale and voluntary employee turnover costing businesses an estimated $1 trillion per year.
The pervasiveness of workplace harassment is staggering. Only one-quarter of female employees report experiencing sexual harassment when asked directly, while 60% of women report experiencing harassment if given specific examples. LGBTQ+ individuals are already facing immense challenges in the workplace, with verbal harassment, including offensive comments and slurs, being a common experience.
The EEOC's failure to enforce anti-harassment laws will leave transgender Americans without protection, as their rights have been effectively erased. The commission is also making it more difficult for state employment commissions to pursue cases, leaving federal court as the only option for LGBTQ+ workers in states without anti-discrimination protections.
This decision will soon affect millions of American workers, including people of color, women, disabled workers, and others. Employers and our economy at large will take a huge hit. It is imperative that state departments of labor issue and update their own anti-harassment policy guidelines and training to preserve what may soon be lost.
Congress must pass the Equality Act, which would add explicit protections for LGBTQ+ people to our country's civil rights laws. In the meantime, we must raise the alarm about this egregious decision and demand that our government enforces anti-harassment laws that protect all workers.
The move is part of a broader effort by President Donald Trump's administration to scale back labor protections and create an environment that fosters harassment and discrimination in the workplace. The EEOC's new stance will leave millions of workers vulnerable to harassment, including women, people of color, LGBTQ+ individuals, and those with disabilities.
Under the leadership of Trump-appointed chair Andrea Lucas, the EEOC has already watered down its guidance on harassment in 2025, removing sections related to sexual orientation and gender identity. The new vote further erodes protections for all protected groups, including racial harassment, age-based discrimination, and sex-based harassment.
The consequences of this decision will be severe. Workplace harassment can have devastating personal impacts, causing lasting economic harm to employees by stunting their life-time earnings, undermining their upward mobility, and even prompting them to change careers entirely. Employers will also feel the effects, with low morale and voluntary employee turnover costing businesses an estimated $1 trillion per year.
The pervasiveness of workplace harassment is staggering. Only one-quarter of female employees report experiencing sexual harassment when asked directly, while 60% of women report experiencing harassment if given specific examples. LGBTQ+ individuals are already facing immense challenges in the workplace, with verbal harassment, including offensive comments and slurs, being a common experience.
The EEOC's failure to enforce anti-harassment laws will leave transgender Americans without protection, as their rights have been effectively erased. The commission is also making it more difficult for state employment commissions to pursue cases, leaving federal court as the only option for LGBTQ+ workers in states without anti-discrimination protections.
This decision will soon affect millions of American workers, including people of color, women, disabled workers, and others. Employers and our economy at large will take a huge hit. It is imperative that state departments of labor issue and update their own anti-harassment policy guidelines and training to preserve what may soon be lost.
Congress must pass the Equality Act, which would add explicit protections for LGBTQ+ people to our country's civil rights laws. In the meantime, we must raise the alarm about this egregious decision and demand that our government enforces anti-harassment laws that protect all workers.