HR-986-115
Placed on the Union Calendar, Calendar No. 234.
What it does
This bill would amend the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA) to remove Native American tribal governments and their enterprises and institutions located on tribal land from the definition of "employer" under the law. As a result, tribal employers would no longer be required to allow employees to form unions, engage in collective bargaining, or take collective action, and would not be subject to NLRA rules against unfair labor practices.
Who benefits
Native American tribal governments, which would gain full authority to set their own labor relations policies without federal NLRA oversight. Tribal enterprises — including casinos, hotels, health clinics, and other businesses on tribal land — would have greater flexibility in managing their workforces. Tribal leaders and advocates who view labor sovereignty as an extension of tribal self-governance would also benefit.
Who is hurt
Employees who work for tribal enterprises on tribal land — including both Native American and non-Native workers — would lose the federal protections currently provided by the NLRA, including the right to organize a union, engage in collective bargaining, and participate in collective action (e.g., strikes). Labor unions that currently represent or seek to represent tribal-enterprise workers would lose their federal organizing rights in those workplaces. Workers in states or tribes without strong independent labor protections could face the greatest reduction in workplace rights.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that tribal governments are sovereign nations with an inherent right to govern their own affairs, including labor relations within their territories. They contend that applying the NLRA to tribal employers treats tribes as subordinate to federal regulatory authority in a way that undermines the government-to-government relationship between tribes and the United States. Supporters point out that states are already exempt from the NLRA as employers, and argue that tribes — as sovereigns — deserve the same treatment. They also argue that tribes are better positioned than the federal government to craft labor policies that reflect their unique economic circumstances, cultural values, and community needs, and that tribal sovereignty over labor relations is essential to tribes' ability to build and sustain their own economies.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that removing NLRA protections from tribal workplaces would strip thousands of workers — many of whom are not tribal members — of fundamental federal labor rights with no guarantee of equivalent protections at the tribal level. They contend that the state-employer exemption is not a valid analogy, because states have their own robust labor law frameworks, while many tribes do not have comparable systems in place. Opponents also argue that the bill prioritizes the institutional interests of tribal governments over the individual rights of workers, and that sovereignty arguments should not override workers' basic ability to organize and bargain collectively. They further note that the National Labor Relations Board has historically applied the NLRA to tribal enterprises, and that removing this coverage could create a race to the bottom in labor standards across tribal economies.
Constitutional context
The bill sits at the intersection of several constitutional frameworks. Congress's plenary power over tribal affairs derives from Article I and has been broadly interpreted, giving Congress authority to both extend and retract federal law as applied to tribes. The NLRA itself rests on the Commerce Clause (Art. I, Sec. 8), upheld in cases like NLRB v. Jones & Laughlin Steel (1937). Tribal sovereignty is a foundational principle of federal Indian law, rooted in treaties and recognized in cases such as Worcester v. Georgia (1832). The Equal Protection Clause is tangentially relevant, as the bill treats tribal employers differently from other private employers; however, the Supreme Court has held that federal classifications based on tribal membership are political, not racial, in nature (Morton v. Mancari, 1974). The Thirteenth Amendment's labor protections and the First Amendment's right to association are also relevant to the underlying worker-rights framework.
Checks and balances
The bill would shift authority from the federal executive branch (specifically the National Labor Relations Board, an independent federal agency) to tribal legislative and governing bodies. Congress would be exercising its plenary power over Indian affairs to contract the reach of a federal regulatory agency. State governments would not gain authority; the exemption would run to tribal governments specifically.
Historical precedent
The Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act of 1975 similarly expanded tribal authority over federally administered programs. The NLRA already exempts federal, state, and local governments as employers, providing a structural precedent for sovereign-entity carve-outs, though tribes occupy a distinct legal category from state governments.