Senators ask Trump's Labor Department nominee where her allegiance would
lie
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[February 20, 2025] By
CATHY BUSSEWITZ
NEW YORK (AP) — Members of a Senate committee grilled Labor
Secretary-designate Lori Chavez-DeRemer on Wednesday about her past
support of pro-union legislation, her position on raising the federal
minimum wage and her willingness to disagree with President Donald
Trump.
Democrats sought assurances during the nominee's confirmation hearing
that Chavez-DeRemer would protect private data held by the Department of
Labor. Republican members of the Senate Committee on Health, Education,
Labor & Pensions asked if she still backed a bill that would have made
it easier for workers to unionize.
Union leaders have described Chavez-DeRemer, a former Republican member
of Congress from Oregon and former mayor of a small city on the edge of
liberal-leaning Portland, as a friend of organized labor. But workers'
rights advocates question if she would be able to uphold that reputation
in an administration that has fired thousands of federal employees.
“We are moving toward an authoritarian society where one person has
enormous power. Will you have the courage to say, ‘Mr. President, that’s
unconstitutional, that’s wrong?’” Vermont independent Bernie Sanders
asked in his opening remarks.
The tension between the relatively pro-union record from her one term as
a congresswoman and the current White House priorities had Chavez-DeRemer
walking a fine line during the hearing, sometimes repeating answers or
deflecting by saying she’s not a lawyer and no longer serves as a House
lawmaker. Appealing to both sides, she said she recognized the $7.25 an
hour minimum wage hasn't been raised since 2009, but added, “What we
don't want to do is shock the economy.”
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Sen. Bill Cassidy, a Republican from Louisiana who chairs the committee,
said the Trump administration had an opportunity to enact a pro-American
agenda. He said business owners were concerned about Chavez-DeRemer’s
past support in Congress of the Protecting the Right to Organize Act.
During her opening statement, Chavez-DeRemer described the proposed law
as “imperfect.” When Cassidy asked her if she still supported it, she
declined to give a yes or no answer.
“I do not believe the secretary of labor should write the laws. It would
be up to Congress to write the law,” she said.
She later said she supports states' “right to work” laws, which allow
employees to refuse to join a union in their workplace. A provision of
the PRO Act sought to overturn such laws.
Sanders, the committee's ranking member, asked Chavez-DeRemer if she
would be a rubber stamp for the administration or stand with workers.
“If confirmed, my job will be to implement President Trump’s policy
vision," Chavez-DeRemer said. "And my guiding principle will be
President Trump’s guiding principle — ensuring a level playing field for
businesses, unions, and, most importantly, the American worker.”
Some political observers surmised that Trump picked Chavez-DeRemer to be
his labor secretary as a way to appeal to voters who are members of or
affiliated with labor organizations.
If confirmed, Chavez-DeRemer would be in charge of the Department of
Labor’s nearly 16,000 full-time employees and a proposed budget of $13.9
billion in fiscal year 2025. She would set priorities that impact
workers’ wages, ability to unionize, and health and safety, as well as
employers’ rights to fire employees.
But it's unclear how much power she would be able to wield as Trump's
Cabinet moves to slash U.S. government spending and the size of the
federal workforce. During his first month in office, the president froze
trillions of dollars in federal funding and offered buyouts to most
federal workers.
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Lori Chavez-DeRemer attends a hearing of the Senate Health,
Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee on her nomination for
Secretary of Labor, Wednesday, Feb. 19, 2025, on Capitol Hill in
Washington. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)
 His administration last week started
laying off nearly all probationary employees who had not yet gained
civil service protection. Billionaire Elon Musk, who leads Trump's
Department of Government Efficiency, has called for getting rid of
entire agencies.
"It’s quite possible that no matter what the secretary of labor
stands for, the billionaire embedded in the Trump administration,
who is so keen on destroying the institutions, will be interested in
gutting the Department of Labor,” said Adam Shah, director of
national policy at Jobs with Justice, a nonprofit organization that
promotes workers' rights.
In January, Trump fired two of three Democratic commissioners
serving on the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, a federal
agency that enforces civil rights in the workplace. He also fired
the acting chair of the National Labor Relations Board, Gwynne
Wilcox, the first Black woman to serve as an NLRB member, as well as
General Counsel Jennifer Abruzzo.
The firings left both independent agencies without the quorum needed
to take actions. Asked Wednesday whether the EEOC and NLRB should
have enough members to carry out its mission to protect workers,
Chavez-DeRemer answered “yes.”
Senators also sought assurance that Chavez-DeRemer would protect
sensitive data. Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Connecticut, asked if she would
deny Musk or his representatives access to information about
competitors or labor violations at the Occupational Safety and
Health Administration. Musk’s companies are the subject of several
OSHA investigations.
Chavez-DeRemer said the decision belonged to Trump. “I work for the
president of the United States, if confirmed, and I will serve at
the pleasure of the president on this issue,” she said.
The answer did not satisfy Murphy.
“You have the ability to disagree with the president. You certainly
serve at his pleasure, but that doesn’t mean that you have to take
actions that you believe to be unethical,” Murphy said. “If the
president asks you to give access to information that benefits a
friend of his who has pending investigations, you wouldn’t say no?”
“I would certainly consult with the Department of Labor solicitors.
I would certainly consult with the White House and their attorneys.
But until I am confirmed and in the Labor Department, I would not be
able to say, specific to this, without having the full picture,”
Chavez-DeRemer said.
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Fourteen Democratic states have challenged the Musk-led DOGE from
accessing government data systems or participating in worker
layoffs, including at the Labor Department. A federal judge on
Tuesday refused to grant a restraining order to block the access.
During her committee testimony on Wednesday, Chavez-DeRemer said
Trump had carried off the "single greatest political achievement of
all time” by attracting votes from working-class Americans, many of
whom traditionally voted for Democrats, and from rank-and-file union
members.
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Associated Press writer Matt Brown in Washington contributed to this
report.
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