Labor News & Commentary January 28, 2024 New York pension system is pressuring Starbucks over its anti-union efforts
https://onlabor.org/january-28-2024/
By Swap Agrawal
Swap Agrawal is a student at Harvard Law School.
In this weekends news and commentary, Trader Joes argues that the NLRB is unconstitutional, and the New York pension system is pressuring Starbucks over its anti-union efforts amid the companys proxy fight with SOC.
On January 26, Bloomberg News reported that Trader Joes argued in a January 16 NLRB Region 1 hearing that the NLRB is unconstitutional. Christopher Murphy of the law firm Morgan Lewis argued on behalf of Trader Joes that [t]he National Labor Relations Act as interpreted and/or applied in this matter, including but not limited to the structure and organization of the National Labor Relations Board and the agencys administrative law judges, is unconstitutional. Murphy said the grocery chain was raising this as an affirmative defense. Administrative Law Judge Charles Muhl replied, Im certainly not going to be ruling on my own constitutionality anytime soon. So youll have to take that up with the board and the federal courts.
Trader Joes strategy mirrors that of SpaceX. As Greg reported earlier this month, Elon Musks rocket company argued in federal court that the National Labor Relations Boards in-house courts are unconstitutional and the agency should be prohibited from taking enforcement actions against it. Specifically, SpaceX relied on a case pending before the Supreme Court, Jarkesy v. SEC, to argue that agency tribunals infringe on the constitutional right to a jury trial in civil cases and NLRB administrative law judges violate the constitutions separation of powers. This is really dangerous, said Seth Goldstein, an attorney for Trader Joes United. Are we really going back to 1920?
FULL story at link above.