Andrea Lucas, chair of the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), sent a letter to all Fortune 500 companies reminding them to treat all employees equally – regardless of race.
The letter, sent on February 26, reminds the employers of over 30 million Americans of their Title VII obligations with respect to employment policies, programs and practices related to Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (DEI) initiatives.
“I urge Corporate America to reject identity politics as its solution to society’s ills,” said EEOC Chair Andrea Lucas. “The only lawful way to stop discrimination on the basis of race or sex, is to stop discriminating on the basis of race or sex.”
The EEOC is responsible for enforcing federal civil rights laws (Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964) that protect job applicants and employees from discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, national origin, age and disability.
President Donald J. Trump nominated Andrea Lucas to serve on the EEOC in his first term and designated her as chair of the committee on November 5, 2025. The five-person commission currently has three members including Chair Lucas; Brittany Panuccio, a nominee of President Trump; and Kalpana Kotagal, a nominee of former President Joe Biden.
The EEOC letter states that the agency’s mission “goes to the heart of the foundational beliefs and promises of our nation, namely that: all Americans are inherently created equal; all citizen are entitled to equal treatment under law; … and all Americans have the right to be treated in the workplaces as individuals … and judged only by the content of their character, skills, and abilities, rather than by the color of their skin.”
The letter criticizes recent “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.”
“The EEOC stands ready to combat such discrimination and protect each worker’s individual rights to be judged on merit,” the letter states.
It concludes,
As we celebrate the 250th Anniversary of our Nation’s founding, let us affirm our shared commitment to operating workplaces where every American worker has an equal opportunity to succeed, without regard to the color of their skin or their sex.
The EEOC and Department of Justice created a joint one-page document, “What To Do If You Experience Discrimination Related to DEI at Work,” to help educate the public about how civil rights rules apply to employment policies, programs and practices.
The EEOC also released a longer question-and-answer document, “What You Should Know About DEI-Related Discrimination at Work,” to help Americans understand their rights.
Lucas said,
Protecting workers begins with preventing discrimination. The EEOC is committed to helping businesses comply with the law. Hiring workers based on their merit, excellence, and character — not skin color or sex — is the right thing to do and benefits employers and employees alike.
An increasing number of large companies adopted DEI policies in recent years, with hundreds submitting their “DEI commitments” to the leftist Human Rights Campaign to include in its Corporate Equality Index.
But that has begun to change. The number of Fortune 500 companies that chose to voluntarily submit their DEI policies for evaluation in the index declined by 65% from 2025 to 2026, falling from 376 to just 131.
As millions of customers became more vocally opposed to DEI initiatives, many companies have responded. Corporations like Walmart and Harley-Davidson have voluntarily dropped their DEI initiatives.
In an exclusive interview with the Daily Citizen in February, Lucas told us the EEOC will crack down on any DEI policy “whenever it involves race or sex discrimination.”
“To the extent any employment policy,” Lucas added, “whether it’s a DEI, Belonging, or Inclusion Policy, if it is functioning to engage in race or sex discrimination, that’s unlawful.”
Related articles and resources:
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Monique Duson: Responding to Critical Race Theory with Grace and Truth
A Fascinating Perspective on Racial Issues
EEOC Protects Women’s Spaces in Federal Workplaces
Andrea Lucas Leads the EEOC: Restoring Agency With Truth and Common Sense
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