On Thursday, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
unanimously ruled that sexual orientation discrimination is already
illegal under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. As BuzzFeed's Chris Geidner reports,
the EEOC's groundbreaking decision effectively declares that employment
discrimination against gay, lesbian, and bisexual workers is unlawful
in all 50 states. The commission already found that Title VII bars
discrimination on the basis of gender identity, protecting trans
employees.
As I've explained before,
the EEOC’s theory here is really quite straightforward. Title VII
prohibits discrimination on the basis of sex, including, the Surpeme
Court has ruled,
irrational sex stereotyping. The EEOC has already found that when an
employer discriminates a gay employee for being effeminate—or a lesbian
employee for being butch—that qualifies as illegal sex stereotyping. Now
the commission has taken that logic one step farther. When an employer
disapproves of a lesbian employee's orientation, he’s really objecting
to the fact that a woman is romantically attracted to another woman.
This objection is based on irrational, stereotyped views of
femininity and womanhood. Thus, when the employer discriminates against
his lesbian employee, that discrimination is based in large part on her sex, and on his anger that she does not fit into her gender role.
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The EEOC also presents a simpler secondary theory: Sexual
orientation discrimination is “associational discrimination on the basis
of sex.” When a homophobic employer mistreats a gay male employee, he
does so because he dislikes the fact that his employee dates other man.
In other words, the employer took that employee's sex into account while
making the decision to treat him unequally. Such discrimination is
obviously sex-based—and therefore forbidden by Title VII.
For now, the EEOC's decision applies only to federal
employees' claims. But the EEOC represents private employees, as well,
and helps employers and employees settle discrimination claims without a
lawsuit. Last year, the EEOC resolved nearly half its cases
through this process. And under the new guidelines, all sexual
orientation discrimination will be considered illegal, empowering gay
private employees to lodge discrimination complaints. Until the Supreme
Court weighs in, lower courts may choose to accept or reject the EEOC's
reading of Title VII. But the commission's rulings are respected by the
judiciary, and could tip more courts to rule that sexual orientation
discrimination is, indeed, already forbidden in the United States.
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