President Donald Trump issued a memorandum Jan. 31 limiting union contracts made under the Biden administration.
The memo, which does not have the force of an executive order, directs all agreements executed in the 30 days before Trump was inaugurated to be deemed invalid.
Trump wrote in the memo that the collective bargaining agreements with federal employees finalized shortly before he took office extended “wasteful and failing policies” of the Biden administration.
Standards are also established that declare no agency, employee, or executive department shall enter into bargaining agreements related to conditions of employment in the 30 days before handing over power to a new administration.
The president cited one policy—enacted three days before he took office—where the Department of Education is prohibited from requiring remote workers to return to the office, as just one example of the challenges he seeks to overcome.
According to the memo, restrictive contractual agreements are detrimental to the president’s authority and the executive branch, preventing effective and efficient management practices.
“Such last-minute, lame-duck [collective bargaining agreements], which purport to bind a new President to his predecessor’s policies, run counter to America’s system of democratic self-government,” Trump wrote.
Biden subsequently rescinded the orders, which ended the legal wrangling for the time being.