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EEOC Issues Updated Guidance on National Origin Discrimination

By Evandro Gigante, Steven J. Pearlman, Melanie Speight, Laura Fant, Arielle E. Kobetz & Rose Farkish on December 8, 2025
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The EEOC has issued a one-page technical assistance document, “Discrimination Against American Workers Is Against the Law” and updated its national origin discrimination landing page, reinforcing national origin discrimination protections with a focus on immigration-related issues.  The latest guidance follows the EEOC’s previous 2016 Enforcement Guidance on National Origin Discrimination, which remains in effect. 

Title VII, which is enforced by the EEOC, prohibits employment discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex, or national origin, and applies to most private employers with 15 or more employees. Under Title VII, discrimination based on national origin with respect to compensation and other terms and conditions of employment is unlawful, and employers are prohibited from limiting, segregating or classifying employees in a way that could deprive them of opportunities based on their national origin.

The new technical assistance document defines national origin discrimination as “treating employees or applicants unfavorably or favorably because they are from a particular country or part of the world, because of ethnicity or accent, or because they appear to be of a certain ethnic background.”

The landing page emphasizes that Title VII protects all workers, “including Americans,” and explains that national origin discrimination can include preferring foreign workers, including workers with certain visa statuses, over American workers.  It further highlights that discrimination can occur when the victim and the person engaging in the discrimination are of the same national origin.

The technical assistance document and landing page provide several examples of fact patterns that might constitute unlawful national origin discrimination, including:

  • Using discriminatory job advertisements, such as ads that suggest an employer prefers or requires applicants from a particular country or with a particular visa status (e.g., “H-1B preferred” or “H-1B only”);
  • Terminating employees who are “on the bench” between assignments at a higher rate than employees who are visa guest workers;
  • Making it more difficult for applicants of one national origin to apply for positions (e.g., subjecting U.S. workers to more laborious application methods than H-1B visa holders during the permanent labor certification (PERM) process);
  • Paying visa guest workers less than similarly situated American workers; or
  • Allowing harassment based on national origin, accent, or ethnicity that creates a hostile work environment.

The document also makes clear that the following considerations do not excuse an employer’s decision to hire foreign workers over American workers:

  • Customer or client preference;
  • Lower labor costs (whether due to “under the table” payment, or abuse of certain visa-holder wage requirement rules); or
  • Beliefs that workers of one or more national origin groups are “more productive” or “possess a better work ethic” than others from different groups.

Takeaways

This most recent EEOC guidance builds upon the enforcement priorities previously laid out by the EEOC around “protecting American workers from anti-American national origin discrimination.” Under the leadership of current Chair Andrea Lucas, the EEOC has emphasized protecting American workers from perceived “foreign preference” practices. In February 2025, then-Acting Chair Lucas announced a priority to “rigorously enforce” Title VII against employers that “illegally prefer non-American workers,” and vowed to protect American workers from anti-American bias.

Employers should expect to see increased EEOC enforcement around national origin discrimination, including with regard to employment actions that favor – or may be perceived to favor – non-Americans to the detriment of American workers.

Photo of Evandro Gigante Evandro Gigante

Evandro Gigante is a partner in the Labor & Employment Law Department and co-head of the Employment Litigation & Arbitration group and the Hiring & Terminations group. He represents and counsels clients through a variety of labor and employment matters, including allegations of…

Evandro Gigante is a partner in the Labor & Employment Law Department and co-head of the Employment Litigation & Arbitration group and the Hiring & Terminations group. He represents and counsels clients through a variety of labor and employment matters, including allegations of race, gender, national origin, disability and religious discrimination, sexual harassment, wrongful discharge, defamation and breach of contract. Evandro also counsels employers through reductions-in-force and advises clients on restrictive covenant issues, such as confidentiality, non-compete and non-solicit agreements.

With a focus on discrimination and harassment matters, Evandro has extensive experience representing clients before federal and state courts. He has tried cases in court and before arbitrators and routinely represents clients before administrative agencies such as the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, as well as state and local human rights commissions.

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Photo of Steven J. Pearlman Steven J. Pearlman

Steven J. Pearlman is a partner in the Labor & Employment Law Department and co-head of the firm’s Whistleblowing & Retaliation Group. Steven’s practice focuses on defending complex employment litigation involving claims of discrimination, harassment and retaliation; wage-and-hour laws; breach of employment contract…

Steven J. Pearlman is a partner in the Labor & Employment Law Department and co-head of the firm’s Whistleblowing & Retaliation Group. Steven’s practice focuses on defending complex employment litigation involving claims of discrimination, harassment and retaliation; wage-and-hour laws; breach of employment contract; and restrictive covenants (e.g., non-competition agreements). Steven is also at the forefront of defending whistleblower retaliation claims, and routinely conducts investigations arising from whistleblower reports. He has successfully tried cases to verdict in Illinois, Florida and California, and defended what is reported to be the largest Illinois-only class action in the history of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois. He has also testified in defense of his investigations in federal court.

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Photo of Melanie Speight Melanie Speight

Melanie Speight is a Special Employment Law Counsel in the Labor and Employment Law Department and a member of the Employment Litigation Group; Employment Counseling, Training and Pay Equity Group; and Workplace Investigations Group.

Melanie is a highly experienced federal litigator. Prior to…

Melanie Speight is a Special Employment Law Counsel in the Labor and Employment Law Department and a member of the Employment Litigation Group; Employment Counseling, Training and Pay Equity Group; and Workplace Investigations Group.

Melanie is a highly experienced federal litigator. Prior to joining Proskauer, Melanie served as an Assistant United States Attorney for the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of New York, handling a complex array of affirmative and defensive cases on behalf of the United States in United States District Court and Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of New York and the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. Melanie served as Chief of the Immigration Litigation Unit, overseeing a large team of attorneys handling one of the most voluminous dockets of immigration challenges in the nation, and was chosen to lead the Office’s specialized Consumer Protection Team, of which Melanie was an inaugural member. As an AUSA, Melanie handled several high-profile cases with enormously high stakes, ranging from defending significant constitutional challenges to prosecuting fraud actions worth billions of dollars in civil penalties. Melanie earned the Department of Justice Director’s Award for exceptional contributions as an AUSA.

In addition, Melanie served as a Senior Counsel and was selected to be a member of an elite trial team in the Special Federal Litigation Division of the New York City Law Department, where she won multiple awards for excellence in litigation.

Melanie’s experience enables her to handle cases through all phases of litigation, reaching favorable outcomes through settlement or motion practice based on clients’ interests. When pre-trial resolution is not possible or desirable, Melanie is a seasoned first-chair trial lawyer, having taken more than twenty federal jury trials to verdict as lead counsel and supervised many more. Melanie has taught trial strategies and skills locally and nationally, to government attorneys with the National Institute for Trial Advocacy and in Washington, D.C. as a presenter for the International Municipal Lawyers Association.

In addition to her litigation experience, Melanie served as an Adjunct Professor of Clinical Law at Brooklyn Law School, teaching federal civil litigation.

Melanie is engaged in the legal community. She is the co-Chair of the Federal Bar Council’s Diversity Committee, a member of the Metropolitan Black Bar Association, and previously served in a committee leadership role with the New York City Bar Association. She has also volunteered as a mentor for St. John’s University students.

Melanie received her B.A. from St. John’s University and J.D. from Brooklyn Law School where she was a member of the Moot Court Honor Society and Associate Managing Editor of the Brooklyn Journal of International Law.

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Photo of Laura Fant Laura Fant

As an associate in the Labor & Employment Law Department and co-chair of the Disability, Accommodations & Leave Management Practice Group, Laura Fant frequently counsels on employee leave and accommodation matters involving the Americans with Disabilities Act, the Family and Medical Leave Act…

As an associate in the Labor & Employment Law Department and co-chair of the Disability, Accommodations & Leave Management Practice Group, Laura Fant frequently counsels on employee leave and accommodation matters involving the Americans with Disabilities Act, the Family and Medical Leave Act and related state and local laws. She also provides general employment counseling and has experience reviewing and updating employee handbooks and company policies, as well as providing training on topics such as discrimination and harassment in the workplace, social media, and the accommodation of physical and mental disabilities. Laura is a frequent contributor to Proskauer’s Law and the Workplace blog.

Before joining the Firm, Laura was assistant general counsel to the City of New York’s Office of Labor Relations. Prior to that, she was law clerk to Judge Jose L. Fuentes of the New Jersey Superior Court, Appellate Division, and a judicial intern to Judge Laura Taylor Swain of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York.

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Photo of Arielle E. Kobetz Arielle E. Kobetz

Arielle Kobetz is an associate in the Labor & Employment Law Department. She assists employers in a wide range of areas, including discrimination, wage and hour, and traditional labor.

Prior to joining Proskauer, Arielle served as a law clerk at the New York…

Arielle Kobetz is an associate in the Labor & Employment Law Department. She assists employers in a wide range of areas, including discrimination, wage and hour, and traditional labor.

Prior to joining Proskauer, Arielle served as a law clerk at the New York City Human Resources Administration, Employment Law Unit, where she worked on a variety of employment discrimination and internal employee disciplinary issues.

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Photo of Rose Farkish Rose Farkish

Reyzel (Rose) Farkish is an associate in the Labor Department and a member of the Employment Litigation & Counseling Group.

Rose’s practice spans all aspects of employment law, grounded in a strong foundation in legal writing, research and counseling. Before joining Proskauer, she…

Reyzel (Rose) Farkish is an associate in the Labor Department and a member of the Employment Litigation & Counseling Group.

Rose’s practice spans all aspects of employment law, grounded in a strong foundation in legal writing, research and counseling. Before joining Proskauer, she handled high-stakes, complex commercial disputes across diverse industries.

Rose earned her J.D., summa cum laude, from New York Law School, where she served as a senior staff editor on Law Review. Rose worked in the school’s Cyberharassment Clinic, where she advocated for victims of online abuse, such as revenge porn, and advised on policy reforms. She also served as a teaching assistant and research assistant for tort, evidence and constitutional law.

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  • Posted in:
    Employment & Labor
  • Blog:
    Law and the Workplace
  • Organization:
    Proskauer Rose LLP
  • Article: View Original Source

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