NLRB Nomination of Craig Becker Stumbles in Senate at Close of Session

Craig Becker’s NLRB nomination may not have been thrown under the bus, but it certainly seems to have been thrown off of it. 

Just prior to adjournment on December 24, the Senate unanimously refused to carry over Mr. Becker’s nomination for consideration in the next Session of Congress.  It was returned to the President.  As a result of the adjournment and a Senate standing rule, Mr. Becker’s nomination is ended unless the President resubmits it to the Senate in the next Session, beginning in January.

That the Senate excluded Becker’s nomination from a general agreement to carry forward most pending nominations at the NLRB and other agencies — those of fellow Board nominees Mark Pearce and Brian Hayes are among the nominations postponed — appears to send a message to the White House that the Senate is in no mood for a fight over the controversial candidate.  Whether anyone at the White House is listening is another story. 

Following the Becker nomination’s approval in October by a Senate Committee vote, generally split along party lines, Senator John McCain (R-AZ) put a “hold” on the nomination.  The move would have required a supermajority of 60 votes for Mr. Becker when his nomination came before the full Senate for a vote. 

The same reception could await a renewed Becker nomination in 2010.  In fact, next time the HELP Committee might actually have to hold hearings on the nomination, a step that was avoided in October.  In the meantime, the other two Board nominations also are likely to be held up despite their inclusion in the carry-over, since Democrats do not want a Labor Board equally divided between Democrats and Republicans.

President Obama could make a recess appointment of Mr. Becker or someone else.  He would not need Senate approval for this step.  But that would be only a stopgap.  Eventually, a regular nominee would have to be submitted to the Senate, and there is little chance opposition to Mr. Becker will abate with the passage of a few months.  A less controversial choice might be the best option for the Administration.

Of course, this Administration setback raises a larger question: where is EFCA?  The Board nominations were viewed by some as a backstop to the proposed legislation; if EFCA ran into trouble, advocates of labor law change at least could take solace in a pro-Labor NLRB that could overturn unfavorable agency decisions.  But for now, it seems, the nominations have become unstuck. 

And EFCA is yet to be taken up.  Can Big Labor push through this hotly debated bill if the Senate won’t confirm the Administration’s nominee whose views most closely conform to the overhaul sought by EFCA, delaying action on all NLRB nominees?  Maybe not.  Perhaps that is why unions have begun to focus on changing state laws. (See With EFCA “Reform” on Hold in Congress, Unions Turn to State Legislatures for Labor Law Change.)  One such effort, for example, in Oregon, resulted in a law that would bar employers from holding group meetings with employees to discuss unionization.  Jackson Lewis is representing employers in a challenge to that enactment.  

Congressional Democrats, however, also could try to push through EFCA wrapped up in a broader jobs bill, which reportedly is “on deck” after health care legislation is settled. This could speed consideration of EFCA and make opposition to the proposed NLRA amendments more difficult for lawmakers.  Employers and their allies in Congress must be on guard that any EFCA measure is considered separately from a general employment bill.

Meanwhile, a cloud hangs over the NLRB’s many decisions issued during the past two years as the U.S. Supreme Court prepares to take up whether the agency has been authorized to act with only two members.  (See U.S. Supreme Court to Decide Appeals Court Conflict Over NLRB Quorum.) A Board joined by three new members would resolve this problem for future cases.  At this writing, however, the chances seem to be dimming that Craig Becker will be part of any long-term solution to this issue.  

Labor's Reform Agenda Continues to Expand at NMB Hearings - Connect the Dots

This week’s National Mediation Board (NMB) hearings gave us another example of the Administration’s ongoing efforts to further Labor’s agenda and make it significantly easier for unions to organize. In an effort to reverse 75 years of experience in conducting union elections under the Railway Labor Act (RLA), the new Obama-appointed NMB member, with a union background, joined with another member, also with a union background, in an attempt to steamroll adoption of a change in NMB voting procedure which would eliminate the need for a union to demonstrate majority support in the voting unit it is attempting to organize.

At the hearings, John Conley, a representative of the Transport Workers Union, stated candidly his union’s position that labor needs this change because unions were not winning enough elections. This admission is astounding, considering that the rate of union election successes under the RLA far outstrips that under the NLRA. During the first six months of this year, unions were winning 73% of all NLRB elections, up from 66% last year. According to the unions, however, winning almost three out of every four election is still not enough.

Several of those testifying painted a grim picture of both “labor politics” and the lack of NMB neutrality exhibited in the proposed rulemaking. What really is driving this issue for the unions is the merger of Delta Airlines and Northwest Airlines. Following the merger, the two unions representing former Northwest Flight Attendants (AFA) and Mechanics (IAM) faced elections at the post-merger Delta, in which union members would vote with Delta’s unrepresented employees in the same voting units. Both unions filed for elections, but, following delays in processing those election applications by the NMB — and coincidentally,just days before the NMB announced the rulemaking — both unions withdrew those applications, likely anticipating an easier road to victory. The timing of these events calls into question the integrity of the NMB process. Considering the enormous stakes the unions have in these elections, involving tens of thousands of employees and potentially millions of dollars in dues revenue for the unions, the handling of its notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM) casts a shadow over the NMB’s actions.

Further illustrating its results-driven approach is the fact the Board is ostensibly limiting its review to just a single change in voting procedures, without addressing other changes which are equally critical for review. At the hearing, Randel Johnson of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce criticized the Board for ignoring the Chamber’s proposal that as the Board considers changing its voting rules, it should also consider establishing a clear decertification procedure.  Johnson argued that if the Board makes it easier for unions to organize, it should similarly protect the rights of employees who no longer want unions that fail to represent them adequately. This argument is all the more compelling if the Board’s rule changes allow representation by unions selected by only a minority of the electorate.

Roger Briton, a Jackson Lewis partner, appeared at the hearing on behalf of the Airline Services Council of the National Air Transport Association, an aviation industry ground handling group. He cautioned the Board about the potential instability which is likely to follow the proposed rule change.  Briton’s remarks submitted at the hearing are available here.  Regrettably, union’s organizing agenda is being adopted and advanced by a friendly NMB majority.

Connect the dots…. The same week these proceedings took place, the Department of Labor announced it would seek to reinterpretation the “advice” exception under the Labor-Management Reporting and Disclosure Act (LMRDA) so as to broaden the application of the law. The unstated objective is to chill employer free speech in union organizing situations, making it easier for unions to organize.

 

Connect the dots…. The pending EFCA labor law reform proposal has as one of its components the imposition of harsh financial penalties against employers who may improperly express their opposition to unions. To avoid the possibility of such penalties, employers are likely to give up their free speech rights and limit their opposition to union organizing, making it easier for unions to organize.

 

Connect the dots…. Amending the NMB election procedures, as proposed by the two Board members, would allow the selection of union representation not by a majority of employees, as has been the case for the past 75 years, but rather by a minority of eligible voters. The objective it to make it easier for union to organize.