Suppression of Organized Labor: Union Busting, NLRB Destruction, and Collective Bargaining Revocation

A multi-pronged attack on organized labor: destruction of the NLRB's quorum through the first-ever mid-term firing of a board member, an executive order stripping collective bargaining from 950,000 federal workers, and extension of the order to additional agencies — described as 'the single most aggressive action against organized labor in US history.'

The Trump administration launched a systematic campaign against organized labor: firing NLRB member Gwynne Wilcox to destroy the board's quorum (the first-ever removal of an NLRB member mid-term), firing NLRB General Counsel Jennifer Abruzzo, issuing an executive order stripping collective bargaining rights from 950,000 federal employees by falsely designating their agencies as performing 'national security' work, and extending that order to NASA, NOAA, and the National Weather Service. A federal judge found Wilcox's firing illegal, but the Supreme Court allowed her removal to stand pending appeal, leaving the NLRB without a quorum to hear cases.

Executive summary

What this record documents

  • On January 27, 2025, Trump fired NLRB member Gwynne Wilcox — the first time a president has ever removed a Board member before the end of their five-year term — leaving the board without the three-member quorum required to hear cases. He also fired General Counsel Jennifer Abruzzo.
  • A federal judge on March 6, 2025 found Wilcox's firing 'illegal,' but the DC Circuit stayed her reinstatement, and the Supreme Court on May 22 ruled she could not return to work pending appeal — leaving the NLRB unable to function indefinitely.
  • On March 27, 2025, Trump signed Executive Order 14251 stripping collective bargaining rights from approximately 950,000 federal employees by designating over a dozen agencies as performing 'intelligence, counterintelligence, investigative, or national security work' — characterized by labor leaders as 'the single most aggressive action against organized labor in US history.'
  • Six major unions — AFGE, AFSCME, NAGE-SEIU, NFFE-IAM, NNU, and SEIU — filed suit on April 3, arguing the order was unconstitutional First Amendment retaliation for union advocacy.
  • On August 28, 2025, Trump extended the collective bargaining ban to NASA, NOAA, the National Weather Service, and the US Agency for Global Media.

Timeline

Sequence of events

  1. NLRB member Wilcox fired and General Counsel Abruzzo fired

    Trump fires NLRB member Gwynne Wilcox mid-term (the first such firing in history) and General Counsel Jennifer Abruzzo, destroying the board's quorum and ability to hear cases.

  2. Federal judge finds Wilcox firing illegal

    US District Judge Beryl Howell rules that Wilcox was 'illegally' fired, but the ruling is stayed on appeal.

  3. Executive Order 14251 strips collective bargaining

    Trump signs EO 14251, 'Exclusions from Federal Labor-Management Relations Programs,' designating over a dozen agencies as national security organizations and stripping collective bargaining from 950,000 federal employees.

  4. DC Circuit stays Wilcox reinstatement

    The appeals court stays the district court's reinstatement order, keeping the NLRB without a quorum.

  5. Six unions file suit

    AFGE, AFSCME, NAGE-SEIU, NFFE-IAM, NNU, and SEIU file a joint lawsuit challenging the collective bargaining executive order as unconstitutional retaliation.

  6. Supreme Court allows Wilcox removal to stand

    The Supreme Court rules Wilcox cannot return to work while she challenges her termination, leaving the NLRB without a quorum indefinitely.

  7. Collective bargaining ban extended

    Trump extends the executive order to NASA, NOAA, the National Weather Service, and the US Agency for Global Media.

Analysis

Reporting, legal context, and impact

What Happened

The Trump administration launched a multi-pronged assault on organized labor beginning in its first week, combining the destruction of the federal agency responsible for enforcing workers' rights with an executive order stripping collective bargaining from nearly a million federal employees — actions described by labor leaders as "the single most aggressive action taken by the federal government against organized labor in US history."

Destroying the NLRB

On January 27, 2025, President Trump fired NLRB member Gwynne Wilcox, a Democratic appointee in the middle of her five-year term — the first time in the board's 90-year history that a president has attempted to remove a member before the expiration of their term. He simultaneously fired General Counsel Jennifer Abruzzo.

With Wilcox gone, the five-member board was left with only two members — below the three-member quorum required by a 2010 Supreme Court decision to issue any decisions. The board was effectively paralyzed: unable to hear unfair labor practice complaints, unable to certify election results, and unable to enforce workers' rights under the National Labor Relations Act.

On March 6, 2025, US District Judge Beryl Howell found the firing "illegal" and ordered Wilcox reinstated. But the DC Circuit stayed her reinstatement on March 28, and on May 22, the Supreme Court ruled she could not return to work while her challenge proceeds — leaving the NLRB without a quorum indefinitely.

Stripping Collective Bargaining from 950,000 Workers

On March 27, 2025, Trump signed Executive Order 14251, "Exclusions from Federal Labor-Management Relations Programs." The order designated over a dozen federal agencies as performing "intelligence, counterintelligence, investigative, or national security work" — a classification that under the Federal Service Labor-Management Relations Statute exempts employees from collective bargaining protections.

The agencies designated included the Department of Veterans Affairs, the State Department, the Department of Energy, and numerous others with no plausible intelligence or national security function. The designation stripped collective bargaining rights from approximately 950,000 federal employees.

On August 28, 2025, Trump extended the order to NASA, NOAA, the National Weather Service, and the US Agency for Global Media — agencies with even less connection to intelligence work.

International Law Concerns

Right to organize and bargain collectively (ICESCR Article 8, ILO Conventions 87, 98, 151): The International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights guarantees the right to form and join trade unions. ILO Convention 87 protects the right to organize; Convention 98 protects collective bargaining; Convention 151 specifically protects public employees. The executive order's blanket revocation of bargaining rights for nearly a million workers violates these provisions.

Freedom of association (ICCPR Article 22): The ICCPR protects freedom of association, including the right to form and join trade unions. The union lawsuit argues the executive order constitutes unconstitutional retaliation for the unions' exercise of First Amendment rights, which would also constitute a violation of ICCPR Article 22.

Why This Entry Is Rated Major

  • Institutional destruction: Incapacitating the NLRB eliminates the only federal agency responsible for enforcing workers' collective bargaining rights, affecting all workers in the country.
  • Scale: 950,000 federal employees lost collective bargaining rights in a single executive order, with extensions adding more agencies.
  • Historical precedent: The first-ever mid-term firing of an NLRB board member and the largest executive revocation of bargaining rights in US history.
  • Pretextual justification: Designating the Department of Veterans Affairs, NOAA, and the National Weather Service as performing "intelligence" work is facially implausible.

Source documents

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