Leigh Thomas is a student at Harvard Law School.
Voters took to the polls in fourteen states for Super Tuesday yesterday. As The New York Times reports, former Vice President Joe Biden won big: winning in states across the South and in several states where he did not seriously campaign. Senator Bernie Sanders won prized delegates in California, along with Colorado, Utah, and his home state of Vermont. The New York Times identified Michigan as a key battleground for Bernie Sanders to challenge Joe Biden’s rising momentum. Michigan unions so far have withheld any major endorsements, according to the Detroit Free Press. This is in line with other major unions withholding endorsements, as Jacob and others have noted in recent days.
Lawmakers in Congress are in early stage negotiations to reauthorize the National Apprenticeship Act (NAA), the federal law governing apprenticeships and on-the-job training. Bloomberg Law reports that the bipartisan effort to reauthorize the law may be jeopardized by the White House’s push to include a plan to create an alternative Industry-Recognized Apprenticeship Program (IRAP). The current draft of the reauthorization bill does not include the IRAP model. Unions view adding IRAPs to the NAA as a non-starter, but the White House may not approve the law without them. The House Committee on Education and Labor released this fact sheet about NAA reauthorization.
The National Labor Relations Board issued a ruling on Tuesday against a New York business owner who closed down his truck repair shop and fired two workers after hearing they intended to join a union. As Bloomberg Law reports, the NLRB ruling required the business to reopen, rehire the workers, and recognize their union. An order to skip union election and proceed to bargaining is an unusual remedy reserved for egregious instances of anti-union behavior. The NLRB also required the truck repair shop to compensate the two workers for earnings they lost due to the terminations.
Professor David Doorey of York University has announced a new collaborative blog/website called Canadian Law of Work Forum. CLWF will post short original articles on issues related to work law and labor policy. The blog is seeking post submissions relating to research, recent case law, legislative reform and debates, and labor policy. CLWF encourages posts dealing with comparative issues of general interest to the international labor law community.
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April 29
DOJ sues for discrimination against US citizens; Musk and DOJ pause litigation on AI discrimination bill; USTR hosts forced labor tariff hearings.
April 28
Supreme Court grants cert on Labor Department judges' authority; Apple store union files NLRB charge; cannabis workers win unionization rights
April 27
Nike announces layoffs; Tillis withdraws objection on Fed nominee; and consumer sentiment hits record low.
April 26
Screenwriters in the Writers Guild of America vote to ratify a four-year agreement with the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers, and teachers in Los Angeles vote to ratify a two-year agreement with the Los Angeles Unified School District.
April 24
NYC unions urge Mamdani to veto anti-protest “buffer zones” bill; 40,000 unionized Samsung workers rally for higher pay; and Labubu Dolls found to contain cotton made by forced labor.
April 23
Trump administration wins in 11th Circuit defending a Biden-era project labor agreement rule; NABTU convenes its annual legislative conference; Meta reported to cut over 10% of its workforce this year.