Elon Musk and trade unions
Elon Musk has commented negatively on trade unions and has clashed with workers at companies he owns including Tesla, SpaceX, and X Corp.. In 2025, Musk was appointed by president Trump to head the Department of Government Efficiency, which was opposed by several trade unions. In 2023, Musk commented that he disagreed with "the idea of unions", describing it as a "lords and peasants" scenario.
Investigations and lawsuits
The National Labor Relations Board had 24 open investigations into Musk's companies Tesla, SpaceX, and X Corp. as of 2025. These include alleged surveillance of Twitter employees during Musk's acquisition of Twitter and interference with union organizing at Tesla. The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission was investigating racial discrimination at SpaceX. In 2024, SpaceX countersued the NLRB in response to the NLRB's investigation into alleged retaliation against employees who spoke out critically.In the first month of Donald Trump's second presidency, Trump fired top board members at several labor agencies, including the National Labor Relations Board, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and the Federal Labor Relations Authority, denying these independent agencies the quorum needed to make board decisions.
A coalition of US labor unions sued to limit the access of the Department of Government Efficiency to sensitive data in various government agencies. The AFL-CIO launched a campaign called the Department of People Who Work for a Living, a reference to DOGE.
Two labor unions representing government employees, American Federation of Government Employees, the Service Employees International Union, and the Alliance for Retired Americans, a non-profit representing retired union members, sued the Treasury Department on February 3, for sharing financial information with DOGE, as violations of the Privacy Act and the Internal Revenue Code.
The AFL-CIO sued the Department of Labor on February 5, to prevent DOGE from accessing its internal IT system, a request that was declined by US District Judge John Bates two days later, because the AFL-CIO failed to show actual harm from the Department of Labor.
The American Federation of Teachers, and three more unions, the National Active and Retired Federal Employees Association, the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers, and the National Federation of Federal Employees sued three government agencies on February 10, for allegedly sharing data with the DOGE, including the Treasury Department for sharing tax refunds and social security information, the Office of Personnel Management for providing job applicant and federal employee data, and the Education Department for providing database of student loans.