In this The Federalist article, Jace White argues that Republicans flirting with the Faster Labor Contracts Act are reviving a bad Obama-era labor policy that would empower union bosses at the expense of workers, employers, and private contracts.
- The article says the Faster Labor Contracts Act would allow federal arbitrators to impose labor terms if unions and employers fail to reach an agreement after several months.
- White argues this is not a real “contract” because the government would effectively dictate terms rather than allowing both sides to reach mutual agreement.
- A House discharge petition has reportedly reached 214 signatures, with nearly every Democrat and four Republicans backing the effort to move the bill toward a floor vote.
- The author compares the bill to the Employee Free Choice Act, an Obama-era unionization push that failed even when Democrats held major power in Washington.
- White says EFCA sought to weaken key protections by replacing secret-ballot union elections with card-check drives and replacing voluntary bargaining with binding arbitration.
- The article warns that binding arbitration would remove important checks on union power by letting government-appointed panels write labor agreements for two years.
- White argues the real beneficiaries would be union officials, who gain dues revenue and political power from newly organized workplaces.
- The piece singles out Teamsters President Sean O’Brien’s lobbying and Republican outreach as a likely reason some GOP lawmakers are supporting the bill.
- The author concludes that conservatives were right to oppose EFCA years ago and should oppose the Faster Labor Contracts Act just as strongly today.
Read the full story: https://thefederalist.com/2026/05/19/why-are-republicans-looking-to-pass-obama-era-forced-unionization-bill/



