The FBIAA engages in legislative advocacy on issues affecting FBI agents, including pay, benefits, and working conditions. The association has advocated for sick leave provisions, locality pay, and relocation bonuses for agents. It also works to prevent budget cuts that could affect agents' compensation or investigative capabilities. During the
2018–2019 government shutdown, then-president Thomas O'Connor released "Voices from the Field," a 72-page report compiling anonymous accounts from agents describing the shutdown's impact on investigations and personal finances. The report warned that the inability to pay confidential sources was causing the FBI to lose informants in counterterrorism and drug investigations. The association was credited by members of Congress and national media with helping end the shutdown. In August 2022, following the
search of Mar-a-Lago and amid increased threats against FBI personnel, then-president Brian O'Hare issued statements condemning threats against law enforcement and calling on political leaders to "unequivocally" denounce violence against agents. In a September 2022 statement responding to reports that some agents had lost confidence in FBI director
Christopher A. Wray, O'Hare pushed back, stating that "attempts to politicize FBI Agents' work and divide our team should be rejected" and expressing confidence in Wray's leadership. The association has consistently opposed
clemency for
Leonard Peltier, who was convicted of murdering FBI special agents Jack Coler and Ronald Williams in 1975. When President
Joe Biden commuted Peltier's sentence on January 20, 2025, president Natalie Bara called it a "last-second, disgraceful act" and "a cruel betrayal to the families and colleagues of these fallen Agents." In February 2025, the association warned that nearly 1,000 FBI Special Agents on probationary status faced potential termination under a federal workforce directive, calling for exemptions for national security and public safety positions. Prior to the announcement of
Dan Bongino as FBI deputy director, the association stated that FBI director
Kash Patel had agreed during a January meeting that the deputy director "should continue to be an on-board, active Special Agent as has been the case for 117 years." Bongino, a former
Secret Service agent who had never worked at the FBI, became the first non-FBI agent to serve as deputy director in the bureau's history. ==2025 personnel actions controversy==