
Swap Agrawal is a student at Harvard Law School.
In this weekend’s news and commentary, Trader Joe’s argues that the NLRB is unconstitutional, and the New York pension system is pressuring Starbucks over its anti-union efforts amid the company’s proxy fight with SOC.
On January 26, Bloomberg News reported that Trader Joe’s argued in a January 16 NLRB Region 1 hearing that the NLRB is unconstitutional. Christopher Murphy of the law firm Morgan Lewis argued on behalf of Trader Joe’s that “[t]he National Labor Relations Act as interpreted and/or applied in this matter, including but not limited to the structure and organization of the National Labor Relations Board and the agency’s administrative law judges, is unconstitutional.” Murphy said the grocery chain was raising this as an “affirmative defense.” Administrative Law Judge Charles Muhl replied, “I’m certainly not going to be ruling on my own constitutionality anytime soon. So you’ll have to take that up with the board and the federal courts.”
Trader Joe’s strategy mirrors that of SpaceX. As Greg reported earlier this month, Elon Musk’s rocket company argued in federal court that the National Labor Relations Board’s in-house courts are unconstitutional and the agency should be prohibited from taking enforcement actions against it. Specifically, SpaceX relied on a case pending before the Supreme Court, Jarkesy v. SEC, to argue that agency tribunals infringe on the constitutional right to a jury trial in civil cases and NLRB administrative law judges violate the constitution’s separation of powers. “This is really dangerous,” said Seth Goldstein, an attorney for Trader Joe’s United. “Are we really going back to 1920?”
On January 26, New York City’s powerful pension system and other Starbucks Corp. investors called on the coffee chain’s board to acknowledge “failures in corporate governance” in its anti-union campaign. The group of investors, which include the New York City Retirement Systems and Trillium Asset Management, successfully got Starbucks to release a third-party audit in December. The audit urged the chain to bolster guidance on how it disciplines workers and measures compliance with collective-bargaining rights, but found no evidence of an “antiunion playbook” that laid out how to thwart employees’ right to unionize. Investors say Starbucks’ board has placed undue emphasis on this statement in the assessment, even though the finding is limited to the absence of “written materials expressly calling for a violation of US law.” “The abridged report does not absolve Starbucks of wrongdoing — in fact, it raises significant questions of conduct and accountability,” the investor group said. “Whether or not such a ‘playbook’ exists, it is clear that the company used aggressive tactics in its approach to union activity.”
The audit and investor report come amid a proxy fight from the Strategic Organizing Center (SOC), a coalition of labor unions. The SOC Investment Group has nominated three members to the company’s board and argues the current slate of directors “has tolerated an unacceptable level of reputational risk, a counterproductive approach to labor issues and a flawed allocation of resources.” Starbucks said in a letter to investors on January 25 that SOC’s nominees lack the “necessary experience, skills, qualifications and other attributes” to offer a balanced perspective on business strategy. Meanwhile, SOC has touted the achievements its proxy battle has already won. “Since the SOC made clear its intention to nominate directors for election to Starbucks’ Board at the upcoming annual meeting, the company has issued numerous announcements related to its purported commitment to improving relations with its employees,” the SOC said in a statement. “These have included the formation of a new board committee, a public letter to Workers United seeking to reengage negotiations and a letter to shareholders regarding the proposal that received majority support at the 2023 annual meeting of shareholders asking for a report on Starbucks’ labor practices.”
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August 13
The United Auto Workers (UAW) seek to oust President Shawn Fain ahead of next year’s election; Columbia University files an unfair labor practice (ULP) charge against the Student Workers of Columbia-United Auto Workers for failing to bargain in “good faith”; and the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) terminates its collective bargaining agreement with four unions representing its employees.
August 12
Trump nominates new BLS commissioner; municipal taxpayers' suit against teachers' union advances; antitrust suit involving sheepherders survives motion to dismiss
August 11
Updates on two-step FLSA certification, Mamdani's $30 minimum wage proposal, dangers of "bossware."
August 10
NLRB Acting GC issues new guidance on ULPs, Trump EO on alternative assets in401(k)s, and a vetoed Wisconsin bill on rideshare driver status
August 8
DHS asks Supreme Court to lift racial-profiling ban; University of California's policy against hiring undocumented students found to violate state law; and UC Berkeley launches database about collective bargaining and workplace technology.
August 7
VA terminates most union contracts; attempts to invalidate Michigan’s laws granting home care workers union rights; a district judge dismisses grocery chain’s lawsuit against UFCW