What's behind the corporate effort to kneecap the National Labor Relations Board?
Workers want unions now more than they have in a generation. Evidence suggests more than 60 million non-union workers would like a union at their workplace. The National Labor Relations Board (NLRB)the agency established by Congress in 1935 to protect workers organizing rightsis handling more union representation elections and unfair labor practice charges than they have in years.
So how have companies responded to this surge in worker organizing?
Some have honored their workers choice and tried to start a positive labor-management relationship, as Microsoft, New Flyer, Ben & Jerrys, and other companies have done. These companies see the value of a constructive relationship with their employees to their bottom line.
Others have taken the opposite tackto the extreme. Led by Elon Musks SpaceX, and joined by Amazon, Trader Joes, and Starbucks, these companies are engaged in a legal battle trying to have the NLRB declared unconstitutional, by resurfacing long-rejected constitutional arguments about the agencys structure. If they succeed, it would kneecap the agency and its operations at the very time workers need it the most.
https://www.epi.org/blog/whats-behind-the-corporate-effort-to-kneecap-the-national-labor-relations-board-spacex-amazon-trader-joes-and-starbucks-are-trying-to-have-the-nlrb-declared-unconstitutional/