Skip to content
Briefings are running a touch slower this week while we rebuild the foundations.See roadmap
2026 FIFA World Cup
3JUN

SoFi workers take FIFA to privacy law

2 min read
08:50UTC

UNITE HERE Local 11 filed a privacy complaint over FIFA's accreditation system on Wednesday 27 May, arguing it forces stadium workers to surrender personal data that reaches federal immigration agencies.

SportDeveloping
Key takeaway

The same coalition now argues FIFA's sign-up paperwork hands worker data to ICE unlawfully.

UNITE HERE Local 11, the hospitality union for southern California, rallied at FIFA's downtown Los Angeles host-committee offices on Wednesday 27 May and filed a formal complaint with the California Privacy Protection Agency and the state attorney general 1. The union alleges FIFA's worker-accreditation system compels staff to hand over a social security number, home address, nationality and country of birth, and to waive their rights under the CCPA (the California Consumer Privacy Act, the state's data-protection law), with that data then passed to the Department of Homeland Security and ICE, the federal immigration enforcement agency 2. Gubernatorial candidate Tom Steyer joined the campaign.

The dispute began as a labour matter. Local 11 filed a charge with the NLRB, the National Labor Relations Board, naming FIFA as co-respondent on Friday 8 May , then held a rally on 19 May demanding immigration agents be barred from SoFi Stadium . The 27 May filing changes the legal terrain entirely: it leaves labour law for data-privacy law, a different statute and a different regulator, and it targets not who may enter the stadium but who may read the workforce's files.

That distinction has an operational edge. The accreditation contractor, not FIFA's security operation, holds the worker data, which is why the complaint names a privacy regulator rather than the labour board. If the agency finds the data-sharing unlawful, FIFA's vetting workflow is exposed to a state injunction weeks before SoFi hosts the opener on Friday 12 June.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

To work at a World Cup match in Los Angeles, staff must pass an accreditation process, essentially a background check run by FIFA. Workers at SoFi Stadium say this requires them to hand over sensitive personal information: their social security number (a US national identification number), home address, nationality and country of birth. The accreditation forms reportedly include wording that lets FIFA share this data with US government agencies, including the Department of Homeland Security and ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement), which carries out immigration arrests and deportations. Many of the roughly 2,000 workers the union represents are immigrants. If their data reaches ICE, they fear immigration enforcement simply for doing their job. The union argues this breaches California's privacy law, the CCPA, which gives people rights over their personal data.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    A successful CPPA enforcement action could require FIFA to suspend or modify its accreditation data-sharing practices mid-tournament, disrupting venue staffing at SoFi Stadium.

    Immediate · Suggested
  • Consequence

    Tom Steyer's public alignment with the campaign converts a labour dispute into a gubernatorial campaign platform issue, giving the complaint sustained political visibility beyond the union's own media reach.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Precedent

    A CPPA finding against FIFA's accreditation data practices would require every future tournament organiser operating in California to adopt CCPA-compliant accreditation systems.

    Long term · Assessed
First Reported In

Update #12 · 13 Days to Go: Squads land, subpoenas follow

MyNewsLA· 29 May 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
Didier Deschamps / France
Didier Deschamps / France
Deschamps said 'everything's fine' after Saliba reported to Clairefontaine, contradicting ESPN sources who described him as very doubtful. France's coach has form for managing injury information as a tactical asset, and the two public accounts have not been reconciled. A back injury's standard safe-return window of 10-14 days puts Saliba's clearance after France's first group match.
FIFA / Gianni Infantino
FIFA / Gianni Infantino
FIFA enters the final eight days holding three unresolved files it cannot resolve by staying silent. Infantino confirmed Iran participation publicly at the April Vancouver Congress; the operational test is the 10 June arrival window. On the SoFi CCPA complaint, only FIFA controls accreditation data-sharing. FIFA has not replied to Local 11 since 8 May.
Carlo Ancelotti / Brazil CBF
Carlo Ancelotti / Brazil CBF
Ancelotti defended picking Neymar over the fit Rodrygo, and Brazil's 6-2 Panama win at the Maracanã gave him cover to hold the injured forward back until the Haiti match on 19 June. He says he has no regrets. Neymar's four soft-tissue injuries since his October 2023 ACL are the counter-argument his coaching staff is managing silently.
FFIRI / Mehdi Taj
FFIRI / Mehdi Taj
Taj told ESPN he expects US visas by 5 June, but Taremi's IRGC naval service from 2010 to 2012 is the named inadmissibility hold under Section 212(a)(3)(B). Iran plays Group G at SoFi Stadium from a Tijuana base, requiring a fresh border crossing each match day against a 10 June arrival deadline.
UNITE HERE Local 11
UNITE HERE Local 11
Local 11's roughly 2,000 SoFi workers moved to a strike authorisation vote after FIFA's eight weeks of silence since the 8 May NLRB charge. A passed vote gives leadership the mandate to picket the 12 June opener. The CCPA data-sharing demand is one only FIFA can answer; Legends Global controls wages, not accreditation.
Argentina / Lionel Scaloni
Argentina / Lionel Scaloni
Scaloni confirmed Messi for a record sixth World Cup on 28 May, choosing the 38-year-old captain's institutional authority over 18-year-old Franco Mastantuono's development potential. Commercial as well as sporting considerations weigh on any Messi decision, and Argentina's AFA was never likely to backstop an exclusion on pure sporting logic.