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Executive Branch · Cabinet Watch

Breaking Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer Resigns Amid Scandal — Trump's Third Cabinet Exit in Six Weeks

She stepped down hours before a planned Congressional hearing. A misconduct probe had engulfed her office. Here is what happened — and what it means for American workers.

Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer resigned on Monday, April 20, 2026. She is the third member of President Trump's cabinet to leave in just six weeks. Her exit ends months of growing scandal at the U.S. Department of Labor.

The White House said she is leaving to take a job in the private sector. News reports describe a long list of serious complaints — including claims of an affair with a bodyguard, drinking alcohol on the job, and using federal staff to plan personal trips on the taxpayer's dime.

She served as Labor Secretary for about 13 months after being sworn in in March 2025. Deputy Secretary Keith Sonderling took over immediately as acting secretary.

The Labor Department sets the rules for wages, overtime, workplace safety, child labor, and unions. A sudden change at the top can slow good decisions or accelerate controversial rollbacks — either way, tens of millions of workers feel downstream effects.

At a Glance
NameLori Chavez-DeRemer
Role30th U.S. Secretary of Labor
Sworn inMarch 2025
ResignedApril 20, 2026
TenureApproximately 13 months
Previous jobU.S. Representative, Oregon's 5th District (2023–2025)
ReplacementKeith Sonderling (acting)
Cabinet exit numberThird of Trump's second term

What Happened

Her exit matters beyond a typical cabinet departure. Chavez-DeRemer was a rare Republican who backed the PRO Act, a bill to make it easier for workers to form unions. Teamsters President Sean O'Brien personally lobbied Trump to pick her. She was pitched as a bridge between the MAGA base and organized labor — a bridge that just collapsed.

On Monday afternoon, White House Communications Director Steven Cheung announced the news on X, saying Chavez-DeRemer would take a private sector job and praising her tenure. Reporters tied the timing to a brewing crisis: two Republicans close to the president told NOTUS that Trump planned to fire her this week ahead of a scheduled congressional hearing on Wednesday, April 22 — and that she resigned first.

Her lawyer, Nick Oberheiden, said the resignation is not the result of legal wrongdoing. Chavez-DeRemer called serving an honor. The White House did not name her next employer.

She has done a phenomenal job in her role. — Steven Cheung, White House communications director, on X

Why She Stepped Down

Trouble surfaced in January 2026 when the New York Post reported that the Labor Department's Inspector General was reviewing a complaint alleging a relationship with a member of her security detail (who soon left her detail). Over the following months, the New York Times, CNN, and NPR reported additional allegations, including:

  • Alcohol kept in her office and drinking during work hours
  • Using official travel for personal purposes and asking aides to plan cover stories
  • Staff being sent to pick up liquor

In April, the Times reported that Chavez-DeRemer and family members sent personal messages to young staff — including a text from her father asking a staffer visiting town to keep plans "private." Her husband, Shawn DeRemer, had reportedly been banned from Labor headquarters after at least two staffers said he touched them inappropriately; prosecutors closed that matter without charges.

Staff turnover

  • Chief of staff and deputy chief of staff resigned in early March 2026
  • A senior aide was fired in late March after a lengthy Inspector General interview
  • Multiple aides were fired or placed on leave as the probe widened

Timeline

January 2026
Post breaks IG probe
Whistleblower-style allegations involving security detail, travel, and conduct on the job.
March 5, 2026
Kristi Noem out at DHS
First cabinet exit of Trump's second term.
Early April 2026
Pam Bondi out as Attorney General
Second cabinet exit. (Related Market Intel)
April 20, 2026
Chavez-DeRemer resigns
Sonderling becomes acting Labor secretary — third cabinet departure in six weeks.

Who is Keith Sonderling?

Sonderling is a Florida attorney confirmed as deputy secretary in March 2025 (53–46). He previously led the Wage and Hour Division in Trump's first term and served as an EEOC commissioner. He has emphasized AI in the workplace, dissented from some EEOC gender-identity guidance, and supports treating many gig workers as independent contractors. The White House has not said whether he will be nominated for the permanent job.

Trump's shrinking cabinet

Cabinet exits — Trump's second term

MAR 5
2026
Kristi NoemSecretary of Homeland Security
Fired
APR 5
2026
Pam BondiAttorney General
Fired
APR 20
2026
Lori Chavez-DeRemerSecretary of Labor
Resigned

Who might be next?

Cabinet watch · public reporting

Politico, The Atlantic, The Guardian, and Reuters have each pointed to different officials as potentially vulnerable. The White House has denied the reports and says the president retains confidence in his team. The cards below summarize what reporters have published — not predictions.

TG
Tulsi Gabbard
Director of National Intelligence
High watch

The Guardian reported Trump polled advisers about replacing her; her deputy resigned over Iran policy friction. The White House denied the story.

HL
Howard Lutnick
Commerce Secretary
Elevated

Politico reported frustration inside the White House over trade politics; officials publicly back Lutnick.

KP
Kash Patel
FBI Director
Moderate

The Atlantic listed Patel among names under discussion; the White House calls him effective.

PH
Pete Hegseth
Defense Secretary
Low watch

Hegseth has been executing leadership changes at the Pentagon — often read as staying in Trump's favor for now.

Sourcing note: Risk labels reflect how widely outlets have discussed each official — not an inside assessment of who will leave. Cabinet churn often arrives without public warning.

What it means for workers

The department had already begun rolling back dozens of workplace rules. That agenda is expected to continue under an acting secretary who shares the administration's deregulatory posture.

Major rollbacks in motion (illustrative)

Home health minimum wage ruleAt risk
Construction safety standardsBeing cut
Mining health rulesUnder review
International child-labor grantsCanceled
Bureau of Labor Statistics staffingDeep cuts

Economists warn that thinning out the Bureau of Labor Statistics could weaken jobs data that businesses, the Federal Reserve, and households rely on. Separately, canceled grants that supported international child-labor monitoring end a channel the U.S. has used for decades alongside partners.

Civic impact

What this means for you

1

Workplace rules can change quickly

Overtime, safety, and contractor classifications are all in flux. Track DOL Federal Register notices if your industry is sensitive to rule changes.

2

Home health funding models may shift

Proposals affecting federal wage floors for aides could ripple to Medicaid budgets and agency staffing.

3

Data quality is a civic issue

When headline jobs numbers lose precision, Congress and the Fed make decisions with blurrier inputs — that eventually hits mortgage and credit markets.

4

Senate confirmation still matters

Any permanent replacement must clear the Senate. Hearings are public — constituents can weigh in before votes, including on other executive-branch controversies that shape the news cycle.

The civic lesson

Inspectors general, career lawyers, and beat reporters turn anonymous tips into accountability. When those channels work in parallel with congressional oversight, the public gets a clearer picture of how power is exercised — even if outcomes are messy.

Frequently asked questions

Why did Lori Chavez-DeRemer resign?
She resigned amid a Labor Department Inspector General review into conduct allegations involving her security detail, travel, and office culture — while the White House framed the move as a transition to the private sector.
Was she fired?
The White House says she resigned. Reporters with Republican sources said a firing was planned ahead of a congressional hearing; she resigned first.
Who is acting secretary?
Deputy Secretary Keith Sonderling is now acting secretary and had already been handling day-to-day operations.
Are there criminal charges?
Her attorney says the resignation is not tied to criminal wrongdoing; no charges were announced in public reporting at the time of publication.
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