Miami Herald (Sunday)

In victory for unions, judge overturns key parts of Trump executive orders

- BY LISA REIN The Washington Post

A federal judge late Friday dealt a victory to federal employees and the unions that represent them, invalidati­ng overnight key provisions of a series of Trump administra­tion executive orders aimed at making it easier to fire employees and weaken the unions.

The overnight ruling by U.S. District Judge Ketanki Brown Jackson in Washington was a setback to the White House’s efforts to rein in the power of federal unions. Though federal employees’ pay is set by Congress, their unions have retained significan­t power even as private-sector unions have been in decline.

The three executive orders, issued just before Memorial Day, had sought to severely restrict the use of “official time” — onduty time that union offi- cials can spend representi­ng their members in grievances and on other issues.

The rules also limited issues that could be bargained over in union negotiatio­ns. And it rolled back the rights of workers deemed to be poor performers to appeal disciplina­ry action against them.

Jackson took issue with key elements of each order and enjoined the adminstrat­ion from enacted them.

The White House did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment Saturday.

The American Federation of Government Employees, the largest of the dozen unions to sue the administra­tion over the executive orders, applauded the ruling. They called it a victory for publicsect­or unions and the protection­s Congress gave federal employees in 1978 when it guaranteed civil servants the right to bargain collective­ly over working conditions in the government.

“President Trump’s illegal action was a direct assault on the legal rights and protection­s that Congress specifical­ly guaranteed to the public-sector employees across this country who keep our federal government running every single day,” AFGE’s national president, J. David Cox Sr., said in a statement.

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