In this Sept 14, 2022 file photo, freight train cars sit in a Union Pacific rail yard in Commerce, California. (ASHLEY LANDIS / AP)

WASHINGTON – Railroad Workers United (RWU) expressed anger at both major parties of the United States on Friday.

US President Joe Biden signed a measure earlier Friday implementing a labor agreement between freight rail carriers and unionized workers that his administration brokered this fall.

Congress cleared the bill on Thursday but the Senate rejected an amendment to grant seven days of paid sick leave to rail workers.

READ MORE: Biden calls on Congress to avert potential rail strike

"A second defeat" was delivered by Republicans, most of whom refused to support a mandate that all railroad workers receive seven days of paid sick leave.

We suffered a one-two punch at the hands of, first the Democratic Party; the second served up by the Republicans.

Railroad Workers United

In a press release on Friday, the labor union said that it "finds it despicable – but not surprising – that both political parties opted to side with Big Business over working people yesterday and vote against the interests of railroad workers – not once, but twice, within hours."

"We suffered a one-two punch at the hands of, first the Democratic Party; the second served up by the Republicans," the union wrote.

The majority of US freight rail workers, said the union, had voted to reject the labor agreement that the Biden administration and Democrats backed. However, lawmakers "simply overrode our voices and desires."

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"This one-two punch from the two political parties is despicable," RWU General Secretary Jason Doering said in a statement.

President Joe Biden speaks before signing H.J.Res.100, a bill that aims to avert a freight rail strike, in the Roosevelt Room at the White House, Dec 2, 2022, in Washington. (MANUEL BALCE CENETA /AP)

"Politicians are happy to voice platitudes and heap praise upon us for our heroism throughout the pandemic, the essential nature of our work, the difficult and dangerous and demanding conditions of our jobs," Doering stressed. "Yet when the steel hits the rail, they back the powerful and wealthy Class One rail carriers every time."

Rail workers previously threatened to strike across the United States if they failed to reach a labor agreement by Dec 9.