Federal News
Senate Expands Federal Whistleblower Protections
March 23, 2026
Senator Chuck Grassley has introduced bipartisan legislation aimed at expanding whistleblower protections for federal employees, particularly those whose duties involve investigating wrongdoing and employees of government corporations. These bills seek to close existing legal loopholes, prevent gag orders, and ensure that whistleblowers can report waste, fraud, and abuse without fear of retaliation. This legislative effort responds to recent Merit Systems Protection Board decisions that limited protections for employees engaged in duty speech disclosures, thereby restoring and enhancing accountability mechanisms within federal agencies and government corporations.
- Why this matters: Expanded whistleblower protections can impact federal agency procurement oversight by encouraging more transparent reporting of contract and operational misconduct.
- Agencies and contractors should anticipate strengthened accountability requirements and potential increases in whistleblower disclosures related to procurement activities.
- Procurement professionals should evaluate internal compliance and reporting policies to align with enhanced protections and mitigate risks.
- Organizations supporting government corporations and federal agencies may find opportunities to assist with compliance training and whistleblower program implementation.
Senator Grassleys leadership in fixing loopholes in whistleblower protections has proven, time and again, to be absolutely critical in ensuring accountability. These two bills will close loopholes, prevent illegal gag orders and ensure that employees who are simply doing their jobs cannot be fired for disclosing violations of law.
— Stephen M. Kohn
Federal law should ensure every whistleblower gets the protections they deserve, including employees who investigate misconduct and executive agency employees of a government corporation. These two bills extend whistleblower protections so more patriotic men and women can come forward to sound the alarm on waste, fraud and abuse in government without fear of retaliation. Whistleblowers shouldn9t be treated like a skunk at a picnic just for telling the truth.
— Chuck Grassley
Whistleblowers should be thankful that Senator Grassley is exercising much-needed leadership to restore a credible Whistleblower Protection Act. Since 1988, he has pioneered protection against gag orders that would silence whistleblowers, and his bill would expand anti-gag protection to government corporations. Most significant, Senator Grassley's legislation would restore full Whistleblower Protection Act rights for whistleblowers who share protected information as part of their job duties, rather than allegations of government misconduct. A recent Merit Systems Protection Board canceled normal whistleblower rights for all employees permitted by their job descriptions to act against problems they discover. No other whistleblower law in the country demotes duty speech to second class rights.
— Tom Devine
Agencies
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, Merit Systems Protection Board, Office of Special Counsel, Senate Whistleblower Protection Caucus, Tennessee Valley Authority
Locations
Sources
- New bills would extend whistleblower protections to more feds - Government Executive · Government Executive · Mar 23
- Grassley Introduces Bipartisan Legislation Expanding Whistleblower Protections for Duty Bound and Government Corporation Employees · Grassley Senate · Mar 18