Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge SENTELLE.
The Department of the Air Force petitions for a review of the Federal Labor Relations Authority’s (“FLRA” or “Authority”) decision in which the FLRA held that the Air Force committed' an unfair labor practice by suspending for three days without pay an employee/union official who, while purporting to represent a fellow employee, among other acts, assaulted a supervisor and came into physical contact with her. The Air Force argues that the conduct of the union official is unprotected under the applicable federal *194 labor laws, 5 U.S.C. § 7102, and that the FLRA has both misapplied its own precedent regarding “flagrant misconduct” and improperly interpreted 5 U.S.C. § 7102. Because we agree with the Air Force that the conduct of the union official is unprotected under any reasonable standard, we grant the petition for review and reverse the FLRA.
I. Background
Sharon Richardson, a union-represented employee at Charleston Air Force Base, participated in a performance feedback session with Georgia Fallaw, an air reserve technician who also serves as aircraft overhaul supervisor, on October 1, 1998. Fal-law had informed Richardson that she wanted to conduct a performance feedback session earlier that day, and Richardson arrived at Fallaw’s office with Richard Egal, the local union president, purportedly to represent her. Fallaw advised that this session was not going to be a disciplinary action and therefore Egal would not be allowed to attend the meeting. Fallaw asked Egal to leave because she feared that he had accompanied Richardson to intimidate and harass her.
See Dep’t of the Air Force, 315 Airlift Wing, Charleston Air Force Base,
When,, apparently properly, Fallaw told Egal to leave, he became angry “and appeared at least somewhat out of control.” Id. at 91. ■ Egal “asked Fallaw whether shé was denying Richardson’s right to union representation.” Id. at 87. Egal was “in-[Fallaw’s] face” and was “so forceful in his body language that [Fallaw] felt compelled to retreat from him as much as ... possible^” Id. at 90. Further, there was physical contact between Egal and Fallaw, with his “stomach pressed up against her.” Id. Egal was “belly to belly and toe to toe, in [Fallaw’s] face,” forcing her to arch backward over a counter. Id. at 88. His “total pattern of conduct at that moment, could reasonably have put Fallaw in fear of some unpredictable blow.” Id. at 90. This confrontation went on somewhere between 10 and 20 seconds, id. at 91, after which Egal left. Fallaw and Richardson proceeded with the feedback session.
Egal received a “Notice of Proposed Suspension” on November 30,1998, stating that a three-day suspension without pay was proposed based on his “flagrant misconduct” toward Fallaw on October 1. Id. at 89. Egal disputed the factual allegations and claimed his conduct was within his rights as a union representative. The Air Force conducted an investigation, concluded that the allegations of misconduct were supported, and issued a “Notice of Decision to Suspend” on January 15, 1999, implementing the proposed suspension for three calendar days without pay. Id.
The Union filed an unfair labor practice charge alleging that the Air Force violated 5 U.S.C. § 7116(a)(1) and (2) by suspending Egal for participating in protected activities, and the FLRA’s Regional Director issued a complaint to that effect. Summary judgment was denied and the case proceeded before an Administrative Law Judge (“ALJ”). The ALJ made factual findings as to Egal’s actions and considered whether Egal’s activity was protected under the applicable labor laws. He noted that 5 U.S.C. § 7102 “guarantees employees the right to engage in activities on behalf of a labor organization without fear of ... reprisal,” but that “involvement in such activities does not immunize an employee from discipline.” Id. at 91. The ALJ first determined that Egal’s conduct occurred during the course of protected activity, and thus was to be evaluated under .the FLRA’s “flagrant misconduct” standard. Id. Second, he concluded that *195 “Egal did not exceed the broad scope of intemperate behavior that remains within the ambit of protected activity.” Id.
In reaching his decision, the ALJ analyzed the “attack,” as he characterized it,
id.
at 92, using the four factors for determining flagrant misconduct described in
Department of the Air Force, Grissom Air Force Base,
The FLRA, by a 2-1 vote, agreed and adopted the ALJ’s findings, conclusions, and recommended decision and order.
Id.
at 80. The Authority noted that “the disputed conduct was ‘assuming a physical position with respect to [the supervisor] that was so close as to have involved some “touching” and ... his use of certain threat-like gestures and an angry demean- or, accompanied by a sort of ranting, all in the course of 10 to 20 seconds’ ” and that the ALJ “also found, however, that the touching was only ‘marginal.’ ”
Id.
While “not condon[ing] what the [ALJ] described as ‘both verbal outbursts and allegedly belligerent nonverbal conduct,’ ” the FLRA opined that “similar conduct has been found protected.”
Id.
(citing
Flight Test Center).
Moreover, the Authority observed that the physical contact that had occurred in
United States Department of Labor Empl. and. Training Admin.,
Chairman Dale Cabaniss filed a dissent.
II. Analysis
The statute governing review of a final order of the FLRA incorporates section 706 of the Administrative Procedure Act (“APA”).
See
5 U.S.C. § 7123(c); 5 U.S.C. § 706. “Thus, when acting ‘within its authority’ and ‘consistent with the congressional mandate,’ the Authority’s decision may only be set aside if it is found to be ‘arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law.’”
Ass’n of Civilian Technicians, Tx. Ch. 100 v. FLRA,
A. Chevron Review
We begin with
Chevron
review, as the interpretation of the statute is fundamental to the final decision and as it provides precedent for future decisions of the Authority. Section 7102(1) establishes the right of a federal employee “to act for a labor organization in the capacity of a rep- ■ resentative and the right, in that capacity, to present the views of the labor organization. ...” As the ALJ recited, “Section 7102 ,.. guarantees employees the right to engage in activities on behalf of a labor organization without fear of penalty or reprisal.”
Charleston Air Force Base,
The ALJ (and the FLRA) identify “ ‘flagrant misconduct’ as the standard” for con *197 duct that exceeds the boundaries of protected activity under § 7102. See id. (emphasis in original). Given the factual findings of the ALJ as adopted by the FLRA, for this court to affirm the Authority’s interpretation of § 7102(1) as applied in this case, we would have to hold that Congress, in adopting § 7102, encompassed the following intent:
A woman in the federal workplace must be aware that if one of her fellow male employees wishes to confront her physically, force her to go belly-to-belly, place her in reasonable fear of an unpredictable blow while ranting and raving at her, and if her agency takes any action to protect her, the male employee cannot be disciplined provided only that he was purporting to act on behalf of a labor organization when he committed the assault, battery, and harassment of his female co-worker.
Is it reasonable to suppose that Congress, the same branch of government that enacted Title VII,' 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(a)(l), a statute held to protect against sexual harassment, intended to immunize this employee conduct from agency discipline by the adoption of the language of § 7102?
See, e.g., Harris v. Forklift Systems, Inc.,
Granted, the language of § 7102(1) is ambiguous. Potentially ‘ there could be many possible interpretations of what it means “to act for a labor organization ... [and] to present the views of the labor organization.” But it is not reasonable to suppose that Congress'considered it permissible and immune from consequence for an employee to commit an assault and battery against a co-worker while ranting, raving and out of control. No employee, including a union official actirig in a representational capacity, has the right to put another in fear of being struck or to commit a battery in' order to “present the views of the labor organization” and “engage in collective bargaining.” 5 U.S.C. § 7102. If the FLRA’s “flagrant misconduct” standard permits such conduct, as the FLRA held it did here, then that standard is an unreasonable interpretation of the limits of § 7102.
To defend its surprising decision, the Authority can only argue that its “flagrant misconduct” standard provides a reason
*198
able interpretation of § 7102. While this begs the question as to whether the tor-tious and probably criminal acts of Egal constituted “flagrant'misconduct,”
see
Part II.B,
infra,
we note that the Authority has offered us little to justify the standard itself. While reciting the formulation that the right to engage in protected activity permits “leeway for impulsive behavior,” the Authority does nothing ■ to tie that vague proposition to its eonclusory standard other than to describe the standard as “long-held.” We are not persuaded. Of course flagrant misconduct is not protected by virtue of § 7102. But the FLRA’s tortured application of its standard here cannot be a reasonable interpretation of the limit of § 7102. Before us the Authority relies in part on parallels from private sector labor law. We find those precedents .instructive on this point but not helpful to the Authority. As we recently reminded the National Labor Relations Board (“NLRB”), “merely applying an unreasonable statutory interpretation for several years cannot transform it into a reasonable interpretation.”
Adtranz,
The Adtranz decision is instructive on a specific issue of the present case as well. In Adtranz, the NLRB had held that it was an unfair labor practice for an employer to issue a handbook barring abusive and threatening language from one employee to another, id. at 25, as the Board deemed that restriction to have >. the “potential to chill the exercise of protected activity....” Id. In rejecting the NLRB’s interpretation of the National Labor Relations Act, we held that “it is preposterous” for the Board to hold “that employees are incapable of organizing a union or exercising their other statutory rights under the NLRA without resort to abusive or threatening language.” Id. at 26. It is at least equally preposterous for the FLRA to conclude that Congress could reasonably have contemplated that federal employees are incapable of exercising their rights under § 7102 without ranting, raving, assaulting, battering and harassing their co-workers.
B. APA Review
No matter what standard the Authority applies, nor what deference we apply in reviewing it, the FLRA’s decision fails the arbitrary and capricious review applicable under the Administrative Procedure Act. As the Authority’s chairman advised its majority, no matter how carefully the ALJ and the majority of the Authority parsed its words:
[T]he Union representative engaged in an “attack” verbally and physically against the supervisor by physically touching up against her while not being in complete control of himself and acting in an angry manner, effectively backing her up against a counter and forcing her to lean backward in an attempt to get away from him, and that the representative was using threat-like gestures so forcefully that she could reasonably fear being hit by some unpredictable blow from him.
Charleston Air Force Base,
With that in mind, we cannot understand what definition of “flagrant misconduct” would exclude the conduct set forth here. Despite the attempts of the majority of the Authority to somehow erase the assault by calling it “marginal,” any appli *199 cation of the “flagrant misconduct” standard which fails to encompass the facts of this casé requires some explanation. Indeed, it is difficult to conceive what explanation could prevent the Authority’s decision from being arbitrary and capricious and in default of its duty under the Administrative Procedure Act. In its opinion the Authority hardly attempts any such analysis, limiting its justification to the descriptive facts
that the incident: (1) occurred in a private office, outside the presence of any nonsupervisory employees other than those involved; (2) was impulsive; (3) was somewhat provoked by the supervisor.
Charleston Air Force Base,
Even if we accept the Authority’s “flagrant misconduct” standard as articulated in
Grissom,
The FLRA’s own precedent holds that “[a] physical response, in the context of a labor-management dispute, by either the union representative or a manager is deemed beyond the limits of acceptable behavior.”
U.S. Marshals,
In the casé at bar, though the ALJ and the FLRA both attempted to downplay it, Egal’s behavior did not consist merely of inappropriate words, but also
actual physical contact
and
physical intimidation,
so that his co-worker had a reasonable apprehension of “some unpredictable blow.” Although the ALJ and the FLRA shy away from characterizing this as an “assault and battery” by definition, that is what it was.
See, e.g.,
BlacK’s Law DictionaRY 109 (7th ed. 1999). As observed by Chairman Ca-baniss, the physical contact and the apprehension of “some unpredictable blow” clearly distinguish this case from
Flight Test Center,
In contrast, the physical intimidation here, comprising the elements of an assault and battery, is the kind of behavior that the FLRA had said in
U.S. Marshals
and
USDOL
was “beyond the limits of acceptable behavior.”
Moreover, we observe that not only is the FLRA’s balancing test for “flagrant misconduct” the same standard applied by the NLRB in interpreting 29 U.S.C. § 158(a)(1), but that test originates from NLRB precedent.
See Department of the Navy, Puget Sound Naval Shipyard,
If, as read by the Authority, the FLRA’s “flagrant misconduct” standard prohibits the Air Force from taking disciplinary action under the facts of this case, then the Authority has altered, indeed, gutted, its “flagrant misconduct” standard without explanation. The FLRA’s suggestion that if an “assault and battery occurred ... there is no' reason to believe that it is dispositive of the question of flagrant misconduct,”
Charleston Air Force Base,
C. Application of Standards
In sum, we agree with Chairman Cabaniss that if the “Authority really in
*201
tends to follow a test that could condone an assault and battery situation by not declaring it to be outside the boundaries of protected activity,” then it is time for the FLRA to find a new test.
Charleston Air Force Base,
The Authority concludes that 5 U.S.C. § 7102 “protects those who conduct labor relations ineffectively as well as those who conduct it effectively, as long as they do not cross the line and engage in flagrant misconduct.”
Charleston Air Force Base,
We have no occasion to determine what actions, other than “flagrant misconduct,” result in a loss of privilege under the federal labor laws. Indeed, as we held in Part II.B,
supra,
Egal’s conduct falls within the scope of what, heretofore, the FLRA has characterized as flagrant misconduct. We also note that it might be an unfair labor practice if an employer unevenly or selectively directs disciplinary action only against offending employees seeking to exercise their statutory rights, but there is no suggestion that this has happened here.
See Adtranz,
III. Conclusion
We grant the petition for review and reverse the FLRA. On remand the Authority is ordered to dismiss the unfair labor practice complaint against the Air Force and to reinstate the disciplinary actions taken against Egal.
Notes
. Nothing herein is intended to suggest that Egal's assault would have been immunized had the victim been a male co-worker or that the conduct would have been immunized had it been that of a supervisor acting upon the part of management.
Cf. Oncale v. Sundowner Offshore Services, Inc.,
