Implications of an NLRB Filled with Obama's Recess-Appointees

This article was written by Roger P. Gilson, a partner in our Stamford, Connecticut office.

Secretary of Labor Hilda Solis’s comments at the AFL-CIO annual meeting last week confirmed speculation that, with or without the resolution of health care legislation, President Obama will announce his recess appointment of Craig Becker to the National Labor Relations Board when Congress breaks for the Easter recess. While this effectively could preclude Becker from serving a normal five-year term, he would serve for about a year-and-a-half, enough time to have a profound impact on labor relations in this country. 

In addition, some say the President also will appoint to the Labor Board union-lawyer Mark Pearce, who was previously nominated, and an as-yet-unnamed person (this would be in place of Bryan Hayes, the previous nominee for the currently vacant “Republican seat” on the Board). Some believe a recess appointment of Becker would be something the President can deliver to his labor supporters in advance of the upcoming mid-term elections.  

Filling the Board’s vacancies with recess appointments now would give the Board time to achieve significant labor law reform through rulemaking without EFCA, which is unlikely to pass any time soon.  Under current law, the NLRB, without Congress, may implement significant change through administrative rulemaking. It did so when it issued rules on the appropriate bargaining unit for acute care hospitals, which significantly reduced delays in scheduling union elections within that industry.   

Rulemaking could be used to streamline election procedures, expand voting “access” through electronic or absentee balloting and enhance special remedies and penalties for employer unfair labor practices in initial organizing and first contract situations. Along with traditional case-by-case decisionmaking and the development of internal agency policies, the Board could use rulemaking to realize some of the advantages unions sought, but have yet to achieve through EFCA. 

There may be another reason for recess appointments. The U.S. Supreme Court has agreed to review a case on whether the current two-member Board had a sufficient quorum when it issued decisions over the past year-and-a-half. The District of Columbia Circuit Court of Appeals has ruled that it did not, though the majority of the other circuits have said otherwise. If the Supreme Court rules against the Board, it will nullify all of those decisions. Without an appropriate number of Board members, the current two-member Board cannot rectify the situation.  If the anticipated recess appointments materialize, a more labor-oriented Board would have the chance to re-consider and re-write those decisions.

The Mid-Winter Meetings

The American Bar Association is meeting this week in Puerto Rico while the AFL-CIO holds its mid-winter meetings in Orlando.  EFCA and the state of union organizing have drawn the attention of both groups.

Fred Feinstein, former General Counsel of the National Labor Relations Board, spoke at the Bar Association meeting.  He thinks EFCA in a compromised form is still a possibility.  Card check is gone but mandatory arbitration and increased penalties might remain, along with expedited elections.

Mr. Feinstein attributed the delay for passage of EFCA to more pressing items, such as health care, having to take priority.  Since the health care legislation appears to be coming to a climax, it seems that the “health care” rationale for delaying an EFCA vote will no longer justify inaction. EFCA, at least in some form, will have to be brought up for a vote or buried.

The AFL-CIO leadership has been aggressive in their comments about the political environment.  Gerald McEntee, the chair of the Executive Council’s Political Education Committee, told reporters that it is “time to draw a line in the sand” regarding political candidates who generally do not support labor.

As Mr. McEntee said, “If you are not with us, then you are against us.”

The first candidate to feel Labor’s anger is Senator Blanche Lincoln of Arkansas.  She has been one of the Democratic Senators who has expressed concerns over EFCA.  She also joined the Republican filibuster against Craig Becker as a potential appointee to the National Labor Relations Board.

Another Democrat has emerged to challenge Senator Lincoln in an upcoming Arkansas primary, which is a prelude to the Senator’s reelection bid in November.  A variety of unions have already pledged $3 million to Senator Lincoln’s opponent.

The AFL-CIO is planning on surpassing the $53 million they spent in 2008 this coming November.  They are focusing on six states, California, New York, Illinois, Nevada, Ohio, and Pennsylvania, for major political activity, especially around Senate candidates like Harry Reid (D-Nev.) and Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.).

We cannot help but wonder where all of this money comes from.  Organized labor has lost another 840,000 members since last year.  Yet the money flows, somehow, from the pockets of union members to their union officials for candidates the AFL-CIO support.

Terry Madonna of Pennsylvania’s Franklin & Marshall College conducted a poll in January.  Mr. Madonna said, “We have seen a decline in support among union members for both Obama and the Democrats…part of it is that unemployment brings low job performance ratings, no matter what the party.  And less enthusiasm means that union members are less likely to vote.”

This has to be of considerable concern to politicians who count on labor not only for financial support but also for the active involvement of union members in their campaigns.  Perhaps this is why Vice President Joe Biden appeared earlier this week at the AFL-CIO meeting in Orlando.  He, too, kept EFCA in play, saying that the Administration was still committed to its passage, at least in some form.  Secretary Solis gave the audience reason to expect a recess appointment for Mr. Becker, perhaps as soon as the end of March.

But privately, labor officials have to question whether any legislative change to the National Labor Relations Act is still possible.  After all, if the Senate will not approve Craig Becker as a member of the National Labor Relations Board, the probability that EFCA proponents can muster sufficient support to amend the National Labor Relations Act must be considered remote.

Robert Haynes, the president of the Massachusetts AFL-CIO, said, “We are demoralized…we are not happy about anything.”

We admire Mr. Haynes for his candor.

Another reason for labor’s demoralized status should be that the public’s opinion of unions is declining.  The Pew Research Center for the People, in a poll released on February 23, said that only 41% of those responding had a favorable view of unions, down from 58% in 2007.  A 17% plummet in approval ratings over a two-year period should trouble any thoughtful individual.  

But the Administration presses on.  Last Friday, the New York Times reported that different departments within the Administration are preparing regulations for federal government contractors that could boost the fortunes of unions.  While the specifics have not been released, some reports suggest that high-paying contractors (such as those with union contracts) will be given an edge, while contractors with labor and environmental violations will be disfavored.  Unions have been urging the Administration to utilize its procurement power to enhance labor’s position.  We will monitor those developments carefully and be closely involved in efforts to check any unwarranted uses of government power in this regard.

And what is Andy Stern up to these days, you may ask?  The President has named him as a member of the Deficit Reduction Panel.  Representative Darrell Issa (R-Calif.) believes the appointment is “irresponsible.”  Representative Issa’s House and Oversight and Government Reform Committee has just issued an extensive report detailing the relationship between the SEIU and ACORN.  In what direction does Mr. Stern hope to take the Deficit Commission?  Perhaps he discussed this with Administration officials during one of his 28 visits to the White House since the current Administration took office.
 

President Poised to Place Becker and Others on NLRB with Recess Appointments

This article was written by Roger P. Gilson, a partner in our Stamford, Connecticut office.

Secretary of Labor Hilda Solis’s comment at the AFL-CIO annual meeting on March 3rd confirms speculations that, with or without the resolution of health care legislation, President Obama will announce the appointment of Craig Becker to the National Labor Relations Board when Congress breaks for its two-week Easter recess, beginning March 29. 

While this “recess appointment” effectively could preclude Becker from serving the normal five-year term were he confirmed by Congress, he would serve about 18 months, enough time to have a profound impact on our nation’s labor law. 

Some say the President also will take the opportunity to appoint Mark Pearce, a union-side labor lawyer previously nominated (and had been expected to win confirmation) and another as yet unnamed person in place of the previous nominee to fill the currently vacant “Republican seat” on the Board.  

In addition to fulfilling the President’s need to respond to the interests of his supporters in organized labor, these appointments will allow the Board to initiate and achieve substantive rulemaking before Becker leaves. 

A Possible Recess Appointment of Craig Becker?

Seeming to hint at a possible recess appointment of Craig Becker to the Labor Board, Secretary of Labor Hilda Solis stated at today’s AFL-CIO annual meeting that organized labor would be "very pleased" with how the Craig Becker nomination is resolved.  Union officials are predicting that President Barack Obama may appoint Mr. Becker when Congress breaks for the Easter holiday.

Stay tuned.