
John Fry is a student at Harvard Law School.
In today’s news and commentary, NLRB stops defending removal protections but continues defending against injunctions; and Colorado legislature considers ending right-to-work.
The NLRB has announced that it will no longer defend the constitutionality of the good-cause removal protections shielding Board Members and the agency’s administrative law judges. After a Missouri company was accused of unfair labor practices and challenged the agency’s constitutionality in federal court, NLRB lawyers notified the judge on Friday that they have modified their litigating position to align with the views asserted by President Trump’s Acting Solicitor General, namely that the President must be able to fire anyone in the executive branch at will.
However, the NLRB also indicated that it will continue to defend itself against these constitutional suits: not because the removal protections at issue are constitutional, but because the plaintiffs have not shown that the protections caused them any injury, meaning that the plaintiffs lack standing. For a longer explanation of this standing issue, see the discussion of Collins v. Yellen in OnLabor’s Tracking Attacks on the NLRB series.
Colorado’s legislature has taken steps to repeal the state’s quasi-right-to-work law, countervailing a recent trend of antiunion laws in other states like Utah and South Dakota. While a typical right-to-work law prohibits union security agreements entirely, Colorado’s law requires any union security agreement to be ratified by 75% of a bargaining unit. A similar effort to repeal the law almost succeeded in 2007, but Colorado’s Democratic governor at the time vetoed the bill. Colorado’s current Democratic governor, wealthy former businessman Jared Polis, has likewise expressed skepticism about the current repeal effort.
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May 8
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May 7
U.S. Department of Labor announces termination of mental health and child care benefits for its employees; SEIU pursues challenge of NLRB's 2020 joint employer rule in the D.C. Circuit; Columbia University lays off 180 researchers
May 6
HHS canceled a scheduled bargaining session with the FDA's largest workers union; members of 1199SEIU voted out longtime union president George Gresham in rare leadership upset.
May 5
Unemployment rates for Black women go up under Trump; NLRB argues Amazon lacks standing to challenge captive audience meeting rule; Teamsters use Wilcox's reinstatement orders to argue against injunction.
May 4
In today’s news and commentary, DOL pauses the 2024 gig worker rule, a coalition of unions, cities, and nonprofits sues to stop DOGE, and the Chicago Teachers Union reaches a remarkable deal. On May 1, the Department of Labor announced it would pause enforcement of the Biden Administration’s independent contractor classification rule. Under the January […]
May 2
Immigrant detainees win class certification; Missouri sick leave law in effect; OSHA unexpectedly continues Biden-Era Worker Heat Rule