Judge says labor unions' lawsuit over DOGE access to Labor Department systems can move forward
Source: AP
Updated 10:35 PM EDT, April 16, 2025
A federal judge says he wont dismiss a lawsuit from labor unions seeking to block Elon Musks team from accessing systems at the Labor Department. The labor unions say that allowing Musks Department of Government Efficiency to access the systems violates the federal Privacy Act because they contain medical and financial records of millions of Americans. They also contend DOGE doesnt have the legal authority to direct the actions of congressionally created agencies like the Department of Labor.
In a ruling Wednesday, U.S. District Judge John Bates said those claims could move forward in court. But some other, more specific arguments made by the unions including that the U.S. Health and Human Services Department violated health care privacy laws by allowing DOGE access were dismissed by the judge.
The federal Privacy Act generally prohibits an agency from disclosing records about a person to another agency, unless the person has first given written permission.
This Court is the first to admit that seeing someones name and SSN in the 648th row of a spreadsheet is different in kind from peeping into someones bedroom window, Bates wrote. Still, he said, Congress enacted the Privacy Act to protect the privacy of people identified in federally maintained systems, so that individuals could trust their information would be accessed only by those employees with a valid need to see it.
Read more: https://apnews.com/article/labor-unions-doge-musk-information-privacy-lawsuit-c97a6f6cb1627050222c91befa6eeedd