FBI workers would get broader whistleblower protections and appeal rights
Officially: FBI Whistleblower Protection Enhancement Act of 2025
FBI employees and applicants would get stronger protection if they report wrongdoing or help with a whistleblower case. The bill covers more kinds of retaliation, expands appeals, and requires clearer training and conflict-of-interest rules.
Where it stands
Sitting in the Judiciary
No vote scheduled. Constituent contact is what moves bills out of committee.
- FBI employees and job applicants would get protection from more kinds of retaliation. That includes punishment for filing an appeal, complaint, or grievance, helping someone else do that, or cooperating with the Inspector General or the Office of Special Counsel.
- FBI managers could not use nondisclosure policies or agreements to block rights protected by federal whistleblower laws.
- FBI officials could not pressure employees or applicants to do political activity. They also could not punish someone for refusing to take part in political activity.
↓ Why your message matters here
This bill is sitting in committee with no scheduled vote — which means a small number of constituent messages can decide whether it moves forward or quietly dies.
The debate
What people are saying about this bill
- More FBI employees may report serious problems if the law protects them more clearly. That could help uncover waste, fraud, abuse, or misconduct earlier.
- Clear training and posted information could make the rules easier to understand. That could reduce confusion and help employees avoid accidentally giving up whistleblower protections.
- Conflict-of-interest rules could make retaliation cases fairer. They could also make the process look more fair to the people involved.
- More protected activity and more covered personnel actions could lead to more complaints. That could put extra strain on the offices that investigate and decide these cases.
- Broader protections could pull ordinary workplace disputes into the whistleblower system. Some people may also worry that reports made during normal job duties would be harder to separate from routine internal conflicts.
- The bill would add work for the Attorney General and investigative offices. Training, notices, reporting, and conflict-of-interest safeguards could also raise costs.
Where this bill is in the process
Legislative timeline
Introduced
Introduced in Senate
Senate Committee
Under Senate committee consideration
Latest: Read twice and referred to the Committee on the Judiciary. (7/29/2025)
Senate Floor Vote
Voted on by Senate
Passed Senate
Approved by Senate
House Review
Sent to House for consideration
Passed Both Chambers
Approved by both House and Senate
Signed into Law
Signed by the President
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