Poyner Spruill Welcomes Education Law Practice Group

Sign Up Created with Sketch. Want to receive our thought leadership?     Sign Up

On November 19, 2025, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (“EEOC”) issued the “Discrimination Against American Workers Is Against The Law” technical assistance guidance, reemphasizing workers’ rights under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. While the guidance outlines existing protections for all employees and job applicants against national origin discrimination, one of the most noteworthy aspects of the document is the EEOC’s explicit focus on what it describes as unlawful “anti-American” bias in employment practices. The EEOC states that unlawful national origin discrimination includes practices that favor foreign workers—such as those holding specific visa statuses—over equally qualified American workers, a priority it views as a pressing compliance concern.

According to this guidance, clear examples of potential unlawful conduct include:

The new guidance underscores the EEOC Chair Andrea Lucas’ continuing priority to prevent unlawful bias against American workers, which she has classified as “a large-scale problem in multiple industries nationwide.” The issuance was quickly followed by the EEOC’s announcement of a partnership with the U.S. Department of Labor in Project Firewall, “an H-1B enforcement initiative that will safeguard the rights, wages, and job opportunities of highly skilled American workers by ensuring employers prioritize qualified Americans when hiring workers and holding employers accountable if they abuse the H-1B visa process.”

The Takeaways

While the guidance does not change Title VII’s existing prohibitions, it does underscore the EEOC’s current enforcement aims to combat “anti-American” discrimination and highlight areas where employers may be most vulnerable to national origin discrimination claims. Employers should use this guidance to:

Poyner Spruill’s employment attorneys are continuing to monitor developments in the EEOC’s heightened enforcement of specific anti-discrimination initiatives and are available to provide counsel on these matters.

◀︎ Back to Thought Leadership
What you Need to Know

Read Related Articles