A federal prosecutor entered a temporary ban on the administration’s ability to revoke its collective bargaining rights for people of the Foreign Service on Wednesday. While the federal labor government’s lawsuit against the government is pending, US District Judge Paul Friedman granted the US District Judge’s ask for a preliminary injunction that prevents the Democratic leadership from implementing a significant portion of an administrative order signed by President Donald Trump. The leadership was sued by the American Foreign Service Association, which represents more than 18, 000 Foreign Service users. The union claimed that Trump’s get “upended decades of robust labor-management relations in the Foreign Service,” removing all state office and US organization for global development employees from the scope of a law that allows them to organize and bargain collectively. According to Trump’s legal team, “agencies with a major regional security focus are being crippled by limiting terms of collective bargaining agreements that impede his ability to protect the interests of the National people.” They wrote that” the democratically-elected President’s resolve regarding the common interest in that realm deserves deference.” The attorneys of the plaintiffs contend that Trump issued the executive order to fight against labor unions and not to accomplish any national safety objectives. As the Administration continues to make significant, continuous changes to people ‘ working conditions and employment,” Foreign Service workers have lost the ability to contract collectively at a time when it matters the most,” according to union lawyers. In a different case last month, the same judge temporarily stymied the administration’s ability to revoke collective bargaining freedom for hundreds of thousands of national staff. A significant portion of Trump’s executive order, according to Friedman, could not be enforced at around three hundred organizations and ministries where workers are represented by the National Treasury Employees Union. His determination was challenged by the government. In 1994, Democratic President Bill Clinton appointed Friedman to the couch.
Trending
- WATCH: Rep. Dan Goldman Humiliates Himself Defending MS-13 Gang Member
- South African president calls refugees ‘cowards’ after arrival in US
- Mexico opposes proposed US tax on remittances
- Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs threatened to ‘blow up’ Kid Cudi’s car, testifies ex-girlfriend Cassie Ventura
- Gavin Newsom Twisted So Hard Right That He Might Get Impeached
- House Judiciary Challenges EU Censorship
- Club for Growth pushes Congress to oppose ‘largest tax hike’ in history and back Trump
- Court To Smartmatic: Did Election Reporting Cause Reputational Harm Or Was It Bribery Probe? Let’s See Docs