Poultry Workers Facing Down National Right-Wing Anti-Union Group and Trump Megadonor
Pres. Trump’s labor board is considering killing a legal precedent that has protected unions since before he was born, according to a recent filing by the board.
One professor of labor law said he was “stunned” when Trump’s National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) announced that it would review the precedent. An AFL-CIO lawyer told The Young Turks it is “highly likely” that the NLRB will at least narrow its scope.
The upcoming NLRB review arose from a dispute between a union representing 800 Delaware poultry workers and the Trump megadonor who owns the plant where they work. Many workers are immigrants and, according to legal filings, about two-thirds have required documents to be translated into Spanish or Haitian Creole.
The dispute has been joined by lawyers for a national right-wing group funded by rich conservativesthat has long opposed the New Deal-era precedent.
Historically, when a union and employer sign a contract, the board has ruled that the contract bars attempts to decertify the union until at least three years later, or after the contract expiress. Without this precedent, known as the contract bar doctrine, deep-pocketed companie--or even third parties--could hammer a union with one vote after another to decertify the union as the workers' representative.
Even if the decertification votes fail, the repeated do-overs could become a dire strain on union resources. And unions nationwide are already bracing for impact: The record of this NLRB--all appointed by Trump--has unions expecting a setback.
As AFL-CIO General Counsel Craig Becker told TYT, “This [NLRB] board is very aggressive in its attempt to displace unions and so it’s highly likely that they’re gonna cut back on the contract bar rule in some way.”
Ironically, eroding the contract bar doctrine could also hurt companies, by destabilizing corporate relationships with unions.
Becker said that, “One of the arguments in favor of these bars is it gives both sides an incentive to be reasonable…as opposed to feeling you’ve got to fight to the hilt about everything.”
With the contract bar doctrine, unions have some wiggle room to make reasonable concessions. For instance, if an employer complains about a bad worker, union leaders don’t have to fear an immediate member uprising if they agree to address the employer’s complaints.
Becker’s not alone in claiming the contract bar doctrine benefits both sides. The doctrine “always had the support of not only unions, but employers. The only one who doesn’t like it is the National Right to Work Committee,” said Martin Malin, professor of law and co-director of the Institute for Law and the Workplace at the Illinois Institute of Technology Chicago-Kent College of Law.
Malin told TYT that the contract bar doctrine is “meaningful for unions, but it’s also meaningful for employers… You could have a race where one union is seeking to take over for another… it’s a potential minefield for employers: What do you do?”
Neither Becker or Malin would say with certainty what effect losing the contract bar doctrine might have.
According to Becker, it could give employers “more of an incentive to try to create dissatisfaction with the [union] as opposed to trying to have a productive relationship.”
Malin said the impact of losing the precedent “all depends on how often [decertification] is tried and that’s really hard to gauge.”
The answer, Malin said, could depend on the National Right to Work Committee (NRTWC). The group's legal foundation requested the NLRB review. “What’s the Right to Work Committee’s next move going to be? Lots of active decertification campaigns?.. It’s something that unions will then have to devote resources to deal with."
Either way, a negative ruling would be “one of those thousand cuts: Death by a thousand cuts,” Malin said.
Both he and Becker referred to the NLRB’s recent decision to let union elections proceed even when allegations of unfair labor practices have yet to be settled. The NLRB is expected to implement that decision at the end of this month.
Both the NLRB and NRTWC have been called out for going beyond even what employers are seeking.
“This board is notorious for reaching out beyond what the parties are arguing,” said Becker, the union lawyer. “They’ve basically done everything they can to obliterate the last eight years of precedent--but now they’re going back even farther.”
“The [NLRB] board--as this board has often done--is seizing on a narrow question and using it to issue a broader ruling,” Becker said. “It looks like even the employer wasn’t arguing to abolish the contract bar.”
Instead, the contract bar challenge arose in late April, from the NRTWC. In an April 28 filing, NRTWC lawyers advocated for the NLRB to “overrule or greatly narrow” the contract bar doctrine.
The NRTWC argued that barring do-over elections thwarts the primary goal of the original National Labor Relations Act: Employee free choice. The NRTWC touts its main goal as defending individual workers from what the group refers to as forced unionization.
However, Malin said, “Trying to create chaos in stable collective-bargaining relationships has nothing to do with what they claim their main activity is.”
Referring to the NRTWC as “more like a wolf in sheep’s clothing,” Malin said, “a lot of positions they take go beyond simply advocating statutes or the courts against union security arrangements.” The NRTWC did not respond to a request for comment or questions about its involvement in the dispute.
Malin said the NRTWC has lost its suits on other labor issues, but that “it has cost the unions lots of money to defeat those claims.”
“The Right to Work Committee bills itself as a public-interest law firm protecting the rights of individual workers, but their funding comes almost entirely from employers and employer organizations, groups like the Koch Brothers,” Malin said.
Mountaire’s owner and chairman, Ron Cameron, has a long history of funding right-wing causes but reportedly failed to convince the Kochs to back Trump this year.
Mountaire’s workers are represented by United Food and Commercial Workers Local 27. Local 27 has been at odds with Mountaire on several fronts.
The union has alleged workplace safety issues (TYT reported that Trump’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration ruled against the union because Mountaire said there was no problem).
And the vote on whether to decertify Local 27 comes amidst a pandemic that has stricken an unknown number of Mountaire workers. Mountaire stopped disclosing infection numbers, but told the NLRB that one month after ostensibly implementing coronavirus mitigation measures, 34 more workers--all asymptomatic--tested positive.
The NLRB is now reviewing Local 27’s challenge to the ongoing mail-in election. Ballots on whether to decertify the union must be received by 3pm on July 14. If the union succeeds in quashing the election, the votes will not be counted.
But regardless of how the Mountaire vote goes, the NRTWC could still win a national victory against organized labor if the NLRB strikes down the contract bar doctrine.
When the NLRB said it would review the contract bar doctrine, it said it would solicit briefs on the matter. According to Becker, the NLRB’s language seeking those briefs could reveal a lot, by indicating whether the board is looking, for instance, at shortening the three-year bar against decertification elections, or eliminating it entirely.
In contrast to rulings where the NLRB did not even seek outside comment, Becker noted that, “It actually looks--uncharacteristically for this board--that they’re doing this in an open way and letting people file briefs.”
“This board has rarely done that,” Becker said. Typically, he said, “They’ve gone in and ripped up precedent willy nilly.”
Jonathan Larsen is TYT’s managing editor. You can find him on Twitter@JTLarsen.
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