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President Trump’s DOJ Puts MLB On Notice Over Pride Night Bible Verse Warnings
President Trump’s Justice Department has referred Major League Baseball to the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission over how the league handled three San Francisco Giants pitchers who wrote Bible verses on their Pride Night caps.
Fox News reported the referral on June 18, 2026.
This started on the field. The Giants held Pride Night on June 12 against the Chicago Cubs, and starter Landen Roupp along with relievers JT Brubaker and Ryan Walker wrote Scripture on their caps for the game.
Roupp wrote Gen 9:12-16 on his, with part of the reference running over the rainbow-colored SF logo the team used for the event.
Employers who treat their employees differently because of their religious beliefs risk enforcement action by @CivilRights or @USEEOC—the MLB is no exception! Discrimination & harassment based on religion are unlawful, & will not be tolerated! pic.twitter.com/gEAwWNl2pt
— AAGHarmeetDhillon (@AAGDhillon) June 18, 2026
That post came from Assistant Attorney General Harmeet Dhillon, who runs the DOJ Civil Rights Division. Her message was blunt: employers who treat workers differently over religious belief risk enforcement from her division or the EEOC, and MLB is not exempt.
Dhillon’s June 18 letter to Commissioner Rob Manfred said DOJ had referred the matter to the EEOC for further investigation.
According to Fox News, the DOJ framed this as a potential Title VII problem, citing an employer’s duty to reasonably accommodate religious beliefs or practices unless doing so creates a substantial burden.
The letter leaned on MLB’s own history. DOJ pointed to the league’s 2020 decision allowing Black Lives Matter patches on jersey sleeves along with other social justice messaging on league-authorized apparel.
That is the heart of the federal complaint. The league found room for one kind of message and then warned players over another.
MLB’s defense is that the issue was not the content. The league said the warning concerned future uniform violations and that its rules prohibit writing or displaying personal messages on apparel or equipment unless the league authorizes it.
MLB later added that the warning was not disciplinary.
The problem for the league is the obvious comparison. If BLM patches were authorized expression in 2020, players reading a Bible verse can fairly ask why their message is the one that drew a warning.
Florida moved next.
Do you practice religious discrimination in Florida, @MLB?
You’ll be hearing from my office soon. https://t.co/znUcRXH8p6
— Attorney General James Uthmeier (@AGJamesUthmeier) June 16, 2026
That warning from Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier landed on June 16, and his office did not stop at a tweet.
The Florida Attorney General’s Office announced on June 19 that it had opened a formal investigation into MLB for alleged religious discrimination and issued a subpoena demanding records on selective enforcement.
The subpoena was issued under the Florida Civil Rights Act and the Florida Deceptive and Unfair Trade Practices Act. The release says the state is examining whether MLB punished Christian expression while permitting secular, social-justice, and ideological messages.
The document demand is wide. MLB must turn over its uniform and equipment rules, its enforcement history since 2020, and any approvals or relaxations for permitted expression, including the BLM patches and social justice messages.
The state also wants policies on Pride Night and themed apparel expectations, plus any documents on religious accommodations or objections.
MLB has until July 23, 2026 to produce the records.
The national mood around all this was set early by Vice President JD Vance.
Trump won we don’t have to do this anymore https://t.co/Dsl5DH2obf
— JD Vance (@JDVance) June 16, 2026
Vance’s reaction captured the political shift around this fight. The old one-way rule, where progressive messages get institutional protection while Christian expression gets treated as a problem, is now running into federal and state scrutiny.
Nobody has been found liable here. The federal action is a referral and an EEOC investigation, and Florida’s move is an investigation backed by a subpoena.
But the question MLB now has to answer in writing is the simple one it likely never expected to face: why was one message welcome on the uniform while another drew a warning?
This is a Guest Post from our friends over at WLTReport. View the original article here.
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