S-874-119
Held at the desk.
What it does
This bill would expand existing whistleblower protections for employees of federal contractors and grant recipients in two key ways. First, it would add "refusing to obey an unlawful order" as a protected act — meaning an employee could not be fired, demoted, or discriminated against for declining to follow an order that would require violating a law, rule, or regulation tied to a federal contract or grant. Second, it would extend these protections to cover current and former members of the intelligence community and employees of state, local, and tribal governments who work for federal contractors or grant recipients. The bill would also bar predispute arbitration agreements from waiving these protections and prohibit executive branch officials from directing contractors to retaliate against protected employees.
Who benefits
Employees of federal contractors and grant recipients who witness or refuse to participate in unlawful conduct — including those in defense, technology, healthcare, and infrastructure sectors. Current and former intelligence community members working for contractors who previously lacked explicit statutory protection. Employees of state, local, and tribal governments that receive federal grants. Taxpayers who may benefit from greater accountability over how federal contract and grant funds are spent. Inspectors general, congressional oversight committees, and other oversight bodies that rely on whistleblower disclosures to detect fraud and abuse.
Who is hurt
Federal contractors and grant recipients who may face increased legal exposure from employee refusals and disclosures, including compliance and litigation costs. Executive branch officials who could face disciplinary action for directing retaliation. Employers who currently use predispute arbitration agreements to resolve employment disputes privately — those agreements would be unenforceable for these claims. Private arbitration providers who handle contractor employment disputes would lose a category of cases. Contractors operating in sensitive national security contexts may argue the extension to intelligence community members creates operational complications.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that existing law left a critical gap: employees who refused to carry out an unlawful order — rather than simply reporting misconduct — had no explicit statutory protection from retaliation, leaving them legally vulnerable for doing the right thing. They contend that extending protections to intelligence community contractors and state and local government employees closes another well-documented gap, since these workers handle significant federal funds but were excluded from the law's coverage. Supporters also argue that banning predispute arbitration waivers is essential because arbitration clauses have historically been used to suppress whistleblower claims before they reach a public forum, undermining the deterrent effect of the law.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that broadly protecting an employee's refusal to follow orders — beyond just reporting misconduct — could be weaponized by employees to resist legitimate managerial direction, creating operational disruptions for contractors and increasing frivolous litigation. They contend that extending protections to intelligence community members raises genuine national security concerns, since disclosures in that context may involve classified information and existing frameworks like the Intelligence Community Whistleblower Protection Act already provide tailored protections. Opponents also argue that eliminating predispute arbitration agreements removes a faster, lower-cost dispute resolution option that benefits both employees and employers, and may conflict with the Federal Arbitration Act's strong policy favoring enforcement of arbitration agreements.
Constitutional context
Congress has broad authority to set conditions on federal contracts and grants under the Spending Clause (Art. I, §8, cl. 1) and the Commerce Clause (Art. I, §8, cl. 3). The provision barring predispute arbitration waivers may face scrutiny under the Federal Arbitration Act's preemption framework, though Congress can explicitly override the FAA — courts applying independent judgment post-Loper Bright (2024) would assess whether this bill's language is sufficiently clear to do so.
Checks and balances
The legislative branch expands employee protections and limits executive branch authority by prohibiting officials from directing contractor retaliation; federal agencies gain disciplinary authority over officials who violate the prohibition, and courts retain jurisdiction to review retaliation claims and arbitration enforceability disputes.
Historical precedent
The National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2013 (§828) previously expanded whistleblower protections for federal contractor employees, establishing the baseline framework this bill would modify.