
Holden Hopkins is a student at Harvard Law School.
In today’s News & Commentary, new reporting on Trump’s Labor Secretary pick and the NLRB rules that Starbucks’ dress code violates labor law.
Otto reported last week that President-elect Trump would be nominating Representative Lori Chavez-DeRemer (R-OR), one of the few Republican sponsors of the PRO Act. Her nomination was perceived by some to be a potentially pro-labor move from Trump, who has run repeatedly on populist messaging but delivered a solidly pro-business agenda during his first term.
However, reporting from Josh Eidelson suggests that first appearance may be deceiving. After a number of business groups expressed alarm with the pick of Representative Chavez-DeRemer, members of the transition team reportedly assured them that they would “find Chavez-DeRemer more palatable once the president-elect’s picks for deputy labor secretary and other posts are revealed.” Former Bush-era DoL official Paul DeCamp further pushed the idea that Chavez-DeRemer would serve merely as a symbolic gesture to appease Trump-friendly union leaders like Sean O’Brien, questioning the level of autonomy Secretary Chavez-DeRemer would have. “I really don’t know who is going to be calling the shots,” DeCamp told Eidelson.
Last week, the NLRB ruled against Starbucks’ dress code policy at its New York City Roastery Reserve cafe, finding it violates labor law. The Board panel unanimously determined that the policy—which bans most personal, political, or religious pins and limits workers to the display of just one labor-related pin—is unlawfully broad and limits workers’ rights to organize. The dress code also barred workers from wearing shirts with graphics, including union insignia. In 2022, Starbucks Workers United filed the initial complaint, alleging that managers threatened employees with disciplinary action for wearing union-related apparel.
The Board ordered Starbucks to rescind or revise its dress code and cease other labor law violations.
Daily News & Commentary
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October 5
In today’s news and commentary, HELP committee schedules a vote on Trump’s NLRB nominees, the 5th Circuit rejects Amazon’s request for en banc review, and TV production workers win their first union contract. After a nomination hearing on Wednesday, the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee scheduled a committee vote on President Trump’s NLRB nominees […]
October 3
California legislation empowers state labor board; ChatGPT used in hostile workplace case; more lawsuits challenge ICE arrests
October 2
AFGE and AFSCME sue in response to the threat of mass firings; another preliminary injunction preventing Trump from stripping some federal workers of collective bargaining rights; and challenges to state laws banning captive audience meetings.
September 30
the NTEU petitions for reconsideration for the CFPB layoff scheme, an insurance company defeats a FLSA claim, and a construction company violated the NLRA by surveilling its unionized workers.
September 29
Starbucks announces layoffs and branch closures; the EEOC sues Walmart.
September 28
Canadian postal workers go on strike, and the Federal Bureau of Prisons cancels a collective bargaining agreement covering over 30,000 workers.