Trump cannot end union bargaining for federal workers, judge rules
- On June 24, U.S. District Judge James Donato prevented the Trump administration from removing collective bargaining privileges for a large number of federal employees across roughly 20 agencies.
- The block came after President Trump issued an order on March 27 that removed collective bargaining requirements for numerous federal agencies, particularly those involved in national security or intelligence work.
- Judge Donato’s ruling applies to agencies including Justice, Treasury, Veterans Affairs, Agriculture, State, and Labor, pausing the order's implementation pending union lawsuits.
- Filings state the order affects about 75 percent of union-represented federal workers and seeks to limit unions' ability to contest policy changes legally.
- The ruling maintains collective bargaining rights for federal employees while legal challenges and appeals continue over the order’s scope and legality.
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The nine Biglaw firms that capitulated to the threats of Donald Trump and agreed to provide hundred of millions in pro bono payola to conservative clients and causes have garnered a lot of criticism from around the industry. And for good reason — the Executive Orders that were threatened were unconstitutional power grabs and many wondered, if a firm won’t stand up to the bullying of the Trump administration for themselves, how will they do it fo…
Trump cannot end union bargaining for federal workers, judge rules - Hawaii Tribune-Herald
A federal judge on Tuesday blocked Republican President Donald Trump’s administration from eliminating union bargaining for hundreds of thousands of federal workers at 21 agencies. U.S. District Judge James Donato in San Francisco agreed with the American Federation of Government Employees and other unions that Trump’s March 27 executive order exempting many federal agencies from obligations to bargain with unions was likely illegal.
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Federal Judge Blocks Trump Admin From Ending Collective Bargaining for Some Federal Workers
A federal judge on June 24 blocked President Donald Trump’s administration from eliminating collective bargaining for hundreds of thousands of federal workers at 21 agencies, finding that unions suing the administration over the move were likely to succeed in their lawsuit. The ruling stems from a lawsuit filed by the American Federation of Government Employees (AFGE) and other unions in April challenging President Donald Trump’s March 27 execut…
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