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Unions sue to restore Pentagon workers' collective-bargaining rights
SecDef Hegseth's no-warning termination of worker agreements broke the law and caused "confusion and disruption," the suit alleges.
A pair of federal employee unions last week sued Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth over his April directive that the department terminate most of its collective bargaining agreements, alleging he violated the Administrative Procedure Act and exceeded his statutory authority when he sought to implement President Trump’s anti-union executive order.
In March 2025, Trump signed an executive order citing a seldom-used provision of the 1978 Civil Service Reform Act to strip roughly two-thirds of the federal workforce of their collective bargaining rights on national-security grounds. Unions and the Justice Department have engaged in pitched legal battle ever since, across more than half a dozen court cases.
Agencies have since moved to implement the order, along with an August 2025 sequel banning unions at more agencies, in fits and starts, in part due to the litigation. While many agencies took informal steps to comply, such as cancelling the automatic collection of union dues, they largely refrained from terminating their contracts with labor groups until last August.
At that point, the Office of Personnel Management changed its guidance regarding the executive orders and suggested agencies could “choose” to terminate their CBAs. OPM again changed course in February, recommending that agencies “should” take that that step.
A new lawsuit filed by the American Federation for Government Employees and the National Federation of Federal Employees in the U.S. District Court for Maryland accuses Hegseth of violating the Administrative Procedure Act for ordering the department to cancel its union contracts with just 24 hours’ notice and no plan to carry it out in an orderly fashion. The result, the unions say, was “chaos.”
“DOD did not have any uniform process for implementing the termination of CBAs, and in many cases there were virtually no notification or communication at all about what actions were being taken, if any,” the lawsuit states. “Some local union leaders were informed by phone that their unions’ CBAs were being terminated; others were informed by email, or by letter; others received no communications at all—their agency counterparts just went ‘radio silent,’ or started refusing to answer routine questions. Beyond these ‘official’ notifications (or lack thereof), Secretary Hegseth’s memorandum begat a firestorm of confusion and misinformation at facilities nationwide—about who still did or did not have collective bargaining agreements, and why, and since when.”
The unions argued that the slapdash rollout also resulted in employees losing their union rights despite being ostensibly exempt from Trump’s executive order. While the order states that the “local employing offices” of police officers, security guards and firefighters will continue to be covered by federal sector labor law, in practice the Pentagon has continued to recognize the union rights only of first responders, not the dispatchers, IT workers and other staff they work alongside.
“Yet DOD failed to prepare any list of subdivisions that are not covered by the EO because they employ police officers, firefighters or security guards before issuance of the Hegseth memorandum, nor did the Hegseth memorandum provide for such a list to be created before implementation of the memorandum,” the unions wrote. “[Thus], across DOD, subdivisions have declared that employees who work alongside police officers, firefighters and security guards—workers in the same ‘local employing office’ within the meaning of the EO—no longer have the protections of their CBAs or any rights under the [federal labor statute], in direct contradiction of the EO.”
AFGE and NFFE’s lawsuit mirrors a similar legal challenge filed last year by the International Federation of Professional and Technical Employees, which successfully resulted in a court order blocking the Defense Department from terminating their contracts. It sets aside the broader question of whether Trump’s executive orders are lawful and focuses on how the Defense Department sought to implement them.
The unions argued that since Hegseth neither moved to terminate CBAs either last August when OPM first said agencies could elect to do so, nor in February when OPM said they “should” take that step, he was required by the Administrative Procedure Act to explain the change in policy.
“For nearly a year after the issuance of EO 14251, DOD continued its longstanding policy of honoring the CBAs into which it has entered,” they wrote. “The DOD’s April 9, 2026 decision to terminate those CBAs within 24 hours irrationally and improperly failed to explain why the DOD would no longer honor existing CBAs, or why termination was necessary within 24 hours notwithstanding the agency’s prior honoring of CBAs and the predictable chaos that would result from DOD’s abrupt reversal.”
They also asserted that by stripping employees who work alongside departmental policy officers, firefighters and security guards of their collective bargaining rights, Hegseth exceeded the authority granted him by the executive order, since the edict exempted those employees’ entire offices from its coverage.
If you have a tip that can contribute to our reporting, Erich Wagner can be securely contacted at ewagner.47 on Signal.
NEXT STORY: 'Shifting gears away from being just a policy shop': Q&A with the Pentagon CIO

Facts Only

* Federal employee unions sued Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth regarding termination of collective bargaining agreements.
* The lawsuit alleges violation of the Administrative Procedure Act and exceeding statutory authority.
* President Trump signed an executive order in March 2025 citing a provision of the 1978 Civil Service Reform Act to strip federal workforce of collective bargaining rights on national-security grounds.
* Agencies moved to implement the executive order and a subsequent August 2025 ban on unions at more agencies.
* The Office of Personnel Management (OPM) changed guidance regarding the executive orders in August 2025, suggesting agencies could "choose" to terminate contracts, and again in February 2026, recommending agencies "should" take that step.
* A lawsuit accused Hegseth of ordering termination with only 24 hours' notice and without an orderly plan, resulting in chaos.
* The lawsuit noted a lack of uniform process and notification regarding contract terminations across the Department of Defense (DOD).
* The unions argued that employees working alongside police, firefighters, or security guards lost collective bargaining rights despite exemptions.
* The unions claimed DOD failed to prepare a list of non-covered subdivisions before implementation.

Executive Summary

Federal employee unions sued Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth alleging he violated the Administrative Procedure Act and exceeded statutory authority by directing the department to terminate collective bargaining agreements. This action followed an executive order signed by President Trump in March 2025, which cited a provision of the 1978 Civil Service Reform Act to remove collective bargaining rights for federal workers on national-security grounds. The lawsuit claims that the implementation of these terminations caused "confusion and disruption."
The legal dispute involves several stages: the executive order, subsequent agency actions (including informal compliance steps like canceling dues collection), and later guidance from the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) suggesting agencies could choose to terminate contracts. The unions specifically allege that the abrupt termination process lacked uniform procedure and notification, resulting in chaos nationwide regarding union status within the Department of Defense. Furthermore, the suits assert that the implementation resulted in employees losing rights despite exemptions intended by the executive order, particularly concerning staff working alongside law enforcement or security personnel.

Full Take

The conflict highlights a tension between executive mandates, statutory authority, and administrative procedure, suggesting that the method of policy execution can introduce significant systemic instability. The process described involves a deliberate decoupling of established labor protections—collective bargaining rights—from official departmental structure through rapid, centralized decree. The legal challenge shifts focus from the legality of the initial executive order to the procedural legitimacy of its implementation by the agency head.
A critical pattern emerges in how administrative action generates consequences: when central authority is exercised without established transitional protocols or comprehensive communication, the result is systemic confusion and uncertainty for the affected parties. The assertion that employees are deprived of rights based on functional groupings (e.g., working alongside security staff) rather than explicit statutory exemptions points to a potential legal gap where broad executive directives can create de facto discriminatory outcomes against specific employee classes.
The implication is that administrative law and procedural fairness are not merely regulatory hurdles but essential mechanisms for preserving established labor relations. When an authority bypasses these mechanisms in favor of speed, the resulting "chaos" demonstrates that the process itself becomes the site of conflict, potentially eroding institutional trust. The pattern suggests that centralized policy shifts, even those rooted in national security concerns, require layered procedural safeguards to maintain legal and operational coherence for the workforce they govern.
Bridge Questions:
If executive orders effectively supersede existing statutory framework regarding labor rights, what is the role of judicial review in balancing national security imperatives against established administrative procedure? How can agencies establish legally sound, uniform procedures for implementing sweeping policy changes without sacrificing operational velocity? What are the long-term consequences for institutional trust when procedural predictability is intentionally disrupted?

Sentinel — Human

Confidence

This text reads like detailed reporting on a legal dispute, characterized by dense legal context and careful framing of conflicting institutional actions.

Signals Detected
low severity: Moderate sentence length variance; uses complex legal phrasing interspersed with direct quotes; not uniformly mechanical.
low severity: Strong thematic focus despite dense legal argumentation; manages to articulate the specific sequence of events and counter-arguments effectively.
low severity: Well-structured narrative that flows chronologically through legal history, agency actions, and the lawsuit claims; uses attribution effectively.
low severity: References to specific dates (e.g., March 2025, August 2025) and specific legal acts (APA, EO) suggest grounding in a real narrative, though internal consistency requires verification.
Human Indicators
The voice shifts appropriately between reporting legal claims and presenting the specific grievances of the suing parties; the use of direct quotations within a structured argument suggests an intent to amplify specific, complex claims rather than simple data presentation.
Unions sue to restore Pentagon workers' collective — Arc Codex