Title 22 › Chapter CHAPTER 52— - FOREIGN SERVICE › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER X— - LABOR-MANAGEMENT RELATIONS › § 4115
The Department must not interfere with, restrain, or punish employees for using their rights under this law. It cannot favor or hurt people to push them into or out of a labor organization when hiring, keeping, or promoting workers. The Department may not run or control a labor group, except to give routine, fair services to similar groups on request. It must not discipline someone for filing complaints or giving testimony under this law. The Department must bargain and negotiate in good faith and cooperate in impasse procedures and decisions. It cannot enforce a rule that conflicts with a collective bargaining agreement that was already in effect before the rule was made, except for rules implementing section 2302 of title 5. The Department must follow the rest of this law. A labor organization must also not interfere with employees’ rights or try to make the Department discriminate. A union cannot coerce, punish, or fine a member to hurt their work. It must not discriminate in membership terms based on race, color, creed, national origin, sex, age, preferential or nonpreferential civil service status, political affiliation, marital status, or disability. A union must bargain in good faith and cooperate in impasse procedures. It may not call or take part in strikes, work stoppages, slowdowns, or picket the Department in a way that interferes with operations (peaceful picketing in the United States that does not interfere is allowed), or allow such acts by failing to stop them. A union may deny membership only for failure to pay dues required of everyone or by fair discipline under its rules. The law says that publicizing a representational election, correcting false statements, or telling employees about government labor policy count as unfair labor practices or can be grounds to set aside an election. Matters that can be raised in an appeals or grievance process may not be raised as unfair labor practices; where section 4139(a)(2) gives an employee a choice between the grievance procedure under subchapter XI or an appeals procedure, the issue may be raised in one forum or as an unfair labor practice, but not both (see section 4114 and subchapter XI).
Full Legal Text
Foreign Relations and Intercourse — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
22 U.S.C. § 4115
Title 22 — Foreign Relations and Intercourse
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73