A federal judge on Friday temporarily blocked the Trump administration from implementing an executive order that a labour union says would cancel collective bargaining rights for hundreds of thousands of federal employees.
US District Judge Paul Friedman ruled that a key part of President Donald Trump's March 27 order can't be enforced at roughly three dozen agencies and departments where employees are represented by the National Treasury Employees Union. The union, which represents nearly 1,60,000 federal government workers, sued to challenge Trump's order. The union said it would lose more than half of its revenue and over two-thirds of its membership if the judge denied its request for a preliminary injunction.
Friedman said he would issue an opinion in several days to explain his two-page order. The ruling isn't the final word in the case. He gave the attorneys until May 2 to submit of a proposal for how the case should proceed.
Some agencies, including the FBI, are exempt from a law requiring federal agencies to bargain with labour organisations over employment matters. Presidents can apply the exemption to agencies that have a "primary function" of performing intelligence, counterintelligence, investigative or national security work.
But no president before Trump tried to use the national security exemption to exclude an entire cabinet-level agency from the law's requirements, according to the employees' union. It said Trump's order is designed to facilitate mass firings and exact "political vengeance" against federal unions opposed to his agenda.
"The President's use of the Statute's narrow national security exemption to undo the bulk of the Statute's coverage is plainly at odds with Congress's expressed intent," union attorneys wrote.
Government lawyers argued that the court order requested by the union would interfere with the president's duty to ensure federal workers are prepared to help protect national security.
"It is vital that agencies with a primary purpose of national security are responsive and accountable to the American people," Justice Department attorneys wrote.
The IRS is the largest bargaining unit represented by the National Treasury Employees Union. A day after Trump signed his order, the administration sued a union chapter in Kentucky to seek a ruling that it can terminate the collective bargaining agreement for the IRS.
The union says the administration has "effectively conceded" that its members don't do national security work. The union members affected by the executive order also include employees of the Health and Human Services Department, the Energy Department, the Environmental Protection Agency and the Federal Communications Commission.
The union said it will lose approximately USD 25 million in dues revenue over the next year. Some agencies, it says, already have stopped deducting union dues from employees' pay.
"In the absence of preliminary injunctive relief, NTEU may no longer be able to exist in a manner that is meaningful to the federal workers for whom it fights," union lawyers wrote.
Government attorneys argued that the courts typically defer to the president's judgment on national security matters.
"Executive actions that are facially valid -- that is, within the lawful authority of the executive -- are entitled to a presumption of regularity," they wrote.
(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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