The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) proposal to rescind 2024 guidance on workplace harassment is being met by condemnation from former EEOC commissioners and Department of Labor officials. The proposal was issued as a “final rule” to the White House on Dec. 29, 2025, bypassing the comment period traditionally afforded to the public with the introduction of rule changes. Shortly after, on Jan. 7, 2026, EEOC Chair Andrea Lucas said the commission may revoke current voting procedures, Bloomberg Law reported. “There was a set process by which the commissioners would each get a reasonable amount of time to review a proposed guidance,” Jenny R. Yang, former chair of the EEOC and member of EEO Leaders, a group of former EEOC and Department of Labor officials, told HR Brew. “They (the EEOC) are violating their own regulations that require notice and comment. This was required by the first Trump administration, and those regulations still remain in place, so I guess we’ll see what happens with some of that voting process.” The harassment guidance, issued during the Biden administration, provided employers with tangible examples to help them prevent and address discrimination if and when it arises. Both workers and employers could be left without clarity around the law, and without an understanding of why the EEOC made the changes. For more on what HR needs to know about the EEOC’s plan to rescind 2024 workplace harassment guidance, keep reading here.—KP |