Debunking Trump's Big Lie, redux - All Rise News
As widely expected on Thursday night, Donald Trump stood behind a podium emblazoned with the presidential seal in the White House and revealed his latest wave of lies about the 2020 presidential e...
What the 'but-for' test means for employers facing retaliation claims
A federal appeals court has cleared President Trump to strip collective bargaining rights from agencies he calls vital to national security.
On June 17, 2026, the US Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit wiped out a lower-court order that had frozen Executive Order 14,251. That order pulls a wide list of federal agencies and their subdivisions out of collective bargaining under the Federal Service Labor-Management Relations Statute - the law that sets union rights for federal employees.
The decision lands squarely in HR territory, because it turns on a question every employment professional knows well: when a worker claims a decision was payback, how does an employer show it would have acted the same way regardless?
Here is how it unfolded. The President signed the order on March 27, 2025. The following month, six unions representing roughly 800,000 federal civilian employees sued, calling the move retaliation for their lawsuits against and public criticism of the administration. In June 2025, a district judge found a "serious question" about that claim and blocked the order. The appeals court disagreed.
Much of the fight centered on a White House Fact Sheet. The unions read it as evidence of hostility toward organized labor. It stated that "[c]ertain Federal unions have declared war on President Trump's agenda," and said the largest federal union "describes itself as 'fighting back' against Trump." But...
As widely expected on Thursday night, Donald Trump stood behind a podium emblazoned with the presidential seal in the White House and revealed his latest wave of lies about the 2020 presidential e...