Mackenzie Bouverat is a student at Harvard Law School.
Following the victory of President-elect Joe Biden, focus has pivoted away from the tumult of electoral politics to the work of governance. Given the likelihood of a Republican-majority in the Senate, the incoming Administration is likely to face difficulty enacting the more ambitious facets of his labor agenda, as Deanna wrote yesterday. However, observers are speculating about the various mechanisms–including more robust OSHA enforcement and pro-labor appointments to the NLRB–through which the President-elect could see through parts of his agenda without resorting to the legislative process.
Last Friday, the Labor Department announced the addition of 638,000 jobs last month—the sixth straight monthly gain—and the jobless rate fell a percentage point to 6.9%. Of the 22 million jobs lost in March and April, the job market has now recovered 12.1 million. But according to the Wall Street Journal and CNBC, this is little cause for economic optimism: the recent record-breaking explosion in new coronavirus infections is likely prompt cities and states to shutter businesses again and force consumers to stay at home, reducing spending and inducing employers to cut labor costs.
Federal stimulus relief talks remain at a bitter standstill, and the majority of commenters expect no significant progress on a bipartisan “lame duck” package until January. Mitch McConnell has already indicated his unwillingness to compromise with Democrats on a “big stimulus” bill, indicating that he believes that small package is sufficient in light of the better-than-expected jobs report.
During a disconcerting investor call last Thursday, Uber CEO Dara Khosrowshahi indicated that the ride-share company’s intention to extend Prop 22 to other states: “Going forward, you will see us more loudly advocate for new laws like Prop 22, which we believe strike the balance between preserving the flexibility that drivers value so much, while adding protections that all gig workers deserve […] We want to have a dialogue with governments [in] other states.” Anthony Foxx, chief policy officer at Lyft, expressed a similar desire to export the ballot measure in an interview last Wednesday with The Hill: “Ideally, now that this issue has been resolved in California we can have a broader conversation about how to replicate something like Prop 22.”
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December 7
Philadelphia transit workers indicate that a strike is imminent; a federal judge temporarily blocks State Department layoffs; and Virginia lawmakers consider legislation to repeal the state’s “right to work” law.
December 5
Netflix set to acquire Warner Bros., Gen Z men are the most pro-union generation in history, and lawmakers introduce the “No Robot Bosses Act.”
December 4
Unionized journalists win arbitration concerning AI, Starbucks challenges two NLRB rulings in the Fifth Circuit, and Philadelphia transit workers resume contract negotiations.
December 3
The Trump administration seeks to appeal a federal judge’s order that protects the CBAs of employees within the federal workforce; the U.S. Department of Labor launches an initiative to investigate violations of the H-1B visa program; and a union files a petition to form a bargaining unit for employees at the Met.
December 2
Fourth Circuit rejects broad reading of NLRA’s managerial exception; OPM cancels reduced tuition program for federal employees; Starbucks will pay $39 million for violating New York City’s Fair Workweek law; Mamdani and Sanders join striking baristas outside a Brooklyn Starbucks.
December 1
California farmworkers defend state labor law, cities consider requiring companies to hire delivery drivers, Supreme Court takes FAA last-mile drivers case.