Trump demands SCOTUS limit federal district court powers
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US President Donald Trump sits during his meeting with NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington on March 13, 2025. Photo by Yuri Gripas/Abaca/Sipa USA (Sipa via AP Images).

One of the largest federal labor unions in the nation is asking a federal judge to block President Donald Trump’s executive order that would strip hundreds of thousands of workers of the right to collectively bargain with their agency employers in what it calls an act of “political retribution” by the president.

The National Treasury Employees Union (NTEU), the nation’s second largest federal union, on Monday filed a lawsuit in Washington, D.C., claiming that the president violated federal law in his order, which claims that more than a dozen agencies — including the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and Bureau of Land Management — were exempt from labor law requirements because they were determined to have a “primary function” in “intelligence, counterintelligence, investigative, or national security work.”

The executive order, signed by President Trump on Thursday, led to a flurry of lawsuits from federal agencies seeking to terminate existing contracts with their union employees.

According to the complaint, the order is a thinly-veiled attempt to continue the administration’s effort to gut the federal workforce by making it easier for the government to terminate employees. NTEU also asserts that Trump is seeking revenge for the union filing lawsuits that have stymied his efforts at mass firings and led to judges ordering thousands of employees who were unlawfully fired to be reinstated, as evidenced by the White House Fact Sheet on the order.

From the filing:

The same White House Fact Sheet reveals the secondary motivation for the Executive Order: political retribution. In justifying the Executive Order, the Fact Sheet states that “[c]ertain Federal unions have declared war on President Trump’s agenda.” It continues, “[t]he largest Federal union describes itself as ‘fighting back’ against Trump. It is widely filing grievances to block Trump policies.” It then adds that this union has “filed 70 national and local grievances over President Trump’s policies since the inauguration — an average of over one a day.”

As a result of the order, the heads of those agencies are required to stop payroll deductions for employees that go toward union dues, which NTEU says accounts for more than half its revenue stream. The organization is responsible for negotiating collective bargaining agreements with federal employers, lobbying for laws and regulations that improve work environments for federal employees, and litigating on behalf of members.

While presidents have previously issued executive orders exempting certain offices within agencies that clearly perform security or intel work from collective bargaining laws, “no President has ever exempted an entire Cabinet-level agency — let alone multiple Cabinet-level agencies,” according to the suit, which claims the order would leave a full two-thirds of the federal workforce without unionization rights.

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