Donald Trump said on Friday that all collective negotiation agreements concluded with federal workers within 30 days of its inauguration will not be approved, the last salvo of the American president’s attempt to redo the federal workforce.
In a memo addressed to the chiefs of all the departments and executive agencies, Trump said that the administration of former American president Joe Biden finally finalized the collective negotiation agreements with federal employees in his last days “in order to harm my administration by extending its policies of waste and failure beyond beyond policies beyond its policies beyond beyond policies beyond beyond policies beyond Beyond politicians beyond beyond politicians beyond the politicians beyond politics beyond politics beyond politics beyond politics beyond Politics beyond politics beyond above politics it is time in power.
It was not immediately clear how many agreements would be affected by the new policy, which calls them “lame collective negotiation agreements”.
Collective negotiation agreements are agreements between unions and their employees who describe working conditions, remuneration and other policies.
This decision comes as President Donald Trump embarks on a massive renovation of the American government, pulling and putting the touch of hundreds of officials in his first steps to reduce bureaucracy and install more loyalists.
The Memo cites a collective agreement from the United States Ministry of Education reached three days before Trump took up his duties which “generally prohibits the agency from returning to distant employees in their offices”.
Trump has signed a decree that would force federal employees to work in office five days a week, reversing a remote work trend that took off in the early stages of the COVVI-19 pandemic.