Nike facing US probe over alleged discrimination against white workers
- On Wednesday, the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission filed a subpoena enforcement action in federal court in Missouri to compel NIKE, Inc. to produce records amid alleged systemic race discrimination against White employees.
- Last December, the EEOC asked White men to file complaints, spurring inquiries and reflecting a Trump administration priority after Andrea Lucas said, `Thanks to President Trump's commitment to enforcing our nation's civil rights laws, the EEOC has renewed its focus on evenhanded enforcement of Title VII.'
- The EEOC is requesting records including criteria for layoffs, use of employee race and ethnicity data in executive pay, and details on 16 DEI programs dating back to 2018.
- Nike responded that it has provided thousands of pages and will cooperate, calling the EEOC's enforcement action a surprising escalation as it cuts 775 jobs at distribution centers in Tennessee and Mississippi.
- The investigation may signal a broader enforcement shift as the EEOC pursues one of its first major probes following last year’s complaint solicitation, facing pressure to prove claims in U.S. courts amid Trump administration policy changes.
137 Articles
137 Articles
A labour agency asked a court to enforce a summons to appear against the sports equipment dealer who she accused of discriminatory practices against white people in the process of recruiting employees.
The action of the EEOC constitutes a "surprising and unusual escalation", denounced the manufacturer of sports goods.
Nike faces probe over claims of DEI-related discrimination against white workers
The US federal agency for workers’ rights is investigating the sportswear giant over allegations its diversity policies were unfair to white people.
Trump administration moves to probe Nike over alleged anti-white hiring bias
NEW YORK, Feb 5 — The Trump administration asked a US court to enforce a subpoena on Nike Wednesday as it pursues allegations the sports giant’s employment practices discriminated against white people.Nike “failed to fully provide the information sought,” the US Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) said in a filing that asked a US court in Missouri to enforce the subpoena.The filing cited 2024 charges from EEOC Commissioner Andrea Luca…
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