U.S. Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer has resigned from her position, the third Trump cabinet member to step down this year. Her tenure ended abruptly following allegations of misconduct, including misuse of resources and inappropriate workplace behavior, which triggered an inspector general investigation, ultimately leading to her resignation. Her tenure was defined by deregulation and a sharp pivot away from Biden-era labor policy.
Who is Lori Chavez-DeRemer?
What was Chavez-DeRemer’s labor agenda?
Why Chavez-DeRemer’s exit matters for the contingent workforce?
Stay Compliant as Rules Change
Lori Chavez-DeRemer served as U.S. Secretary of Labor from March 2025 until April 2026. Before joining the Cabinet, she was a Republican congresswoman from Oregon and previously served as mayor of Happy Valley. Her appointment was notable for its bipartisan support and her unusual positioning as a Republican with some pro-union leanings. Teamsters President Sean O'Brien supported Chavez-DeRemer for this cabinet role due to being one of the few Republicans in Congress to support a bill that made it easier for workers to unionize
Chavez-DeRemer’s labor agenda centered on workforce expansion, apprenticeship growth, and a more employer-friendly regulatory approach. The Labor Department said that in her first year it registered more than 3,000 new apprenticeship programs and added more than 350,000 apprentices, showing a strong emphasis on skills-based labor-market pipelines.
Early in her tenure, the Department of Labor launched an aggressive push to roll back prior rules, proposing dozens of deregulatory actions aimed at reducing compliance burdens and increasing business flexibility. This included efforts to scale back expanded overtime eligibility thresholds, limit the scope of joint employer liability, and reduce enforcement intensity tied to gig economy platforms.
The most important policy item for contingent labor was the department’s move to reverse the Biden-era independent contractor rule. In February 2026, DOL proposed rescinding the 2024 rule and returning to an “economic reality” framework. When deciding whether a worker is an employee or an independent contractor, the economic reality framework gives greatest weight to how much control the business has over the work and whether the worker has a real opportunity for profit or loss from running their own business. This stricter test can increase the risk that contingent workers must be treated as employees.
Chavez-DeRemer’s exit matters for the contingent workforce because the issue is whether the independent-contractor rollback continues moving forward. If the new leadership continues the proposal, employers may get a more flexible classification regime. If it pauses or is revised, compliance uncertainty will rise for companies that depend on contractors, temp labor, and hybrid workforces.
When worker classification rules shift, uncertainty becomes a cost. Schedule a 30-minute demo with TCWGlobal to learn how are Employer of Record (EOR) solutions absorb classification risk and give you the flexibility to scale without second-guessing your workforce model.