
Holt McKeithan is a student at Harvard Law School.
In today’s News & Commentary, Trump spending cuts continue to threaten federal workers, and Google AI workers allege violations of labor rights.
Trump’s massive federal spending cuts have put millions of workers, both inside and outside the federal government, in jeopardy. Yesterday, thousands of workers at the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs research office were informed they would not be retained. 83% of the office’s 4600 employees are on time-limited research appointments. The administration was told it cannot retain employees after their appointments end. The VA’s research has led to a number of medical innovations, including the first implantable cardiac pacemaker and the nicotine patch. “This move will effectively mean the end of VA research as we know it in red and blue states,” said Senator Patty Murray.
The research positions at the VA are but the latest in massive layoffs. Some 20,000 federal workers have been fired, and the positions of the 200,000 probationary employees have been threatened. But fired federal workers are fighting back. Workers protested at 30 “Save our Services” rallies across the country on Wednesday, speaking out against Elon Musk’s actions, which they dub a “corporate coup”.
Outside the federal government, Trump’s failure to enforce and support the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act is undermines protections for nearly 3 million pregnant workers. In the face of state attacks against the law, which guarantees basic accommodations for pregnant workers, the Trump administration has undercut the EEOC, which enforces the PWFA.
Alphabet Workers United filed an NLRB complaint Tuesday against GlobalLogic Inc., which manages a group off nearly 2,000 employees creating Google’s AI products. It claims that the Google vendor prohibited discussion of wages in online internal forums. One employee alleges he was fired in retaliation for violating that policy. But federal labor law protects rights of employees to discuss and take action about working conditions.
Daily News & Commentary
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October 17
Third Circuit denies DOL's en banc rehearing request; Washington AG proposes legislation to protect immigrant workers; UAW files suit challenging government surveillance of non-citizen speech
October 16
NLRB seeks injunction of California’s law; Judge grants temporary restraining order stopping shutdown-related RIFs; and Governor Newsom vetoes an ILWU supported bill.
October 15
An interview with former NLRB chairman; Supreme Court denies cert in Southern California hotel case
October 14
Census Bureau layoffs, Amazon holiday hiring, and the final settlement in a meat producer wage-fixing lawsuit.
October 13
Texas hotel workers ratify a contract; Pope Leo visits labor leaders; Kaiser lays off over two hundred workers.
October 12
The Trump Administration fires thousands of federal workers; AFGE files a supplemental motion to pause the Administration’s mass firings; Democratic legislators harden their resolve during the government shutdown.