Labor News & Commentary January 26, 2024 Walmart is hit with a ULP in California
https://onlabor.org/january-26-2024/
By Julio Colby
Julio Colby is a student at Harvard Law School.
In Todays News & Commentary: The Fifth Circuit appears skeptical of the NLRBs ruling that Elon Musks anti-union tweet constituted a threat to Tesla workers; University of California regents postpone action on undocumented student hiring plan; and Walmart is hit with a ULP in California.
On Thursday, an en banc panel of the Fifth Circuit heard oral argument in Tesla Inc. v. NLRB, where conservative judges expressed skepticism regarding the NLRBs determination that Elon Musks tweet about workers losing stock options if they unionized was a threat. The case centers on Musks 2018 post responding to a question about unions on Twitter, the platform that Musk bought in 2022 and has since renamed X. The NLRB ruled in 2021 that the tweet constituted an illegal threat and ordered Musk to delete the tweet. A three-judge Fifth Circuit panel upheld the ruling last year, but the full court granted Teslas request to reconsider the case en banc. The judges questioned the order requiring the deletion of the tweet and whether Twitter should enjoy less protection than other forms of communication. Teslas lawyer argued that the NLRB hasnt had a court uphold a violation on speech thats in the digital public square and that is involving not just employees, but predominantly in fact, public figures and members of the public. The court also wrestled with Teslas First Amendment arguments against the NLRBs finding that Musks tweet was a threat in violation of federal labor law. The NLRBs lawyer stressed that the Supreme Courts 1969 decision in NLRB v. Gissel Packing Co. mandates a deferential review of a board finding that an employer statement had a tendency to coerce workers. But judges pushed back, claiming Gissel is inapplicable because the statement was made on Twitter, and thus outside of the employer-employee relationship. The case could impact the NLRBs role in monitoring employer speech for potential coercion and threats, influencing how speech in the digital public square implicating labor law is treated.
On Thursday, the University of California regents postponed for at least a year any action on a proposal to permit the hiring of undocumented immigrants on campus, citing significant risks to the institution. In 2022, student organizers initiated a campaign advocating for the hiring of immigrants without consideration of their legal status, arguing that federal law does not explicitly prevent state entities like the university system from employing undocumented individuals. In May 2023, UC leadership committed to having a working group create an implementation plan for the proposal across the systems 10 campuses. However, in November, they announced a delay in the plans release, citing legal considerations. Their decision to delay comes after 25 undocumented students initiated a hunger strike earlier this week, urging university leaders to move forward with the plan.
FULL story at link above.