Posted on 01/09/2016 1:24:48 PM PST by willowsdale
On Monday, January 11 the U.S. Supreme Court is set to hear expanded oral arguments in Friedrichs v. California Teachers Association, a case brought by 10 Golden State public school teachers.
Friedrichs is directly based on precedents set by the National Right to Work Legal Defense Foundationâs last two Supreme Court victories, Knox v. SEIU (2012) and Harris v. Quinn (2014).
Friedrichs challenges the constitutionality of public sector forced unionism, which was deemed constitutional in Abood v. Detroit Board of Education in 1977. A decision in Friedrichs that overturns Abood would prohibit public sector union bosses nationwide from compelling employees to pay union dues or fees just to get or keep a job.
In the petitionersâ merits brief, filed with the High Court in September, they contend, in part, that educators should not be forced to pay union dues or fees because the statewide California Teachers Union and its national affiliate, the National Education Association (NEA), âadvocate numerous policies that affirmatively harm [many] teachers â¦â
Neither teacher union bosses nor California Attorney General Kamala Harris, also a respondent, have since challenged the plaintiffsâ understanding that NEA negotiating demands such as â[l]ayoff and recall based only on seniority as bargaining unit members, licensure/certification, and ⦠affirmative actionâ benefit some educators at othersâ expense.
In fact, in her own merits brief, Harris explicitly conceded: âUnions do have substantial latitude to advance bargaining positions that ⦠run counter to the economic interests of some employees.â
What Harris failed to acknowledge is the legal significance of this stunning concession. It means that a key rationale for upholding public-sector compulsory unionism in Justice Stewartâs 1977 Abood opinion was based on a completely false premise. Stewart theorized: âA [forced] union shop arrangement has been thought to distribute fairly the cost of ⦠[bargaining] activities among those who benefit.â
Considering that parties on both sides agree that the Court mischaracterized the ends government union bosses often seek when imposing forced unionism on workers who may want nothing to do with a union, the High Court cannot uphold Abood on the original grounds.
To find public-sector forced union dues and fees constitutional now, the Justices would effectively have to rewrite Stewartâs Abood opinion to read: âA [forced] union shop arrangement has been thought to distribute fairly the cost of ⦠[bargaining] activities among those who benefit and those who are harmed.â
According to a union-label politician like Kamala Harris, there is nothing untoward about the government forcing public employees, as a condition employment, to financially support a union whose actions may harm the workers economically all while union bosses pursue their own special interest agenda.
In her brief, Harris contends that government union bosses can choose to make âtrade-offsâ in which conscientious, hardworking, and forced fee-paying employees lose economic opportunities they otherwise would have had while the unionâs power is further entrenched, as long as such âtrade-offsâ are made in a âreasonedâ manner!
But it is far from clear whether a majority of Supreme Court justices will go along with this extraordinary new rationale for upholding Aboodâs result.
Indeed, denying private organizations the legal power to collect compulsory assessments, even from people who truly benefit from their activities, is a âhallmark of a free society,â as the late Pennsylvania law professor Clyde Summers, an eminent specialist in labor policy, once acknowledged.
If the Supreme Court upholds Abood and continues to hold public sector compulsory unionism constitutional, allowing union bosses to collect forced fees from public employees who are actually harmed by union activities, to what extent will the U.S. be a âfree societyâ at all?
Hopefully, we never have to answer that question.
Mark Mix is the president of the National Right to Work Legal Defense Foundation, the leading national organization dedicated to defeating forced unionism in the courts.
An important case, no doubt. If taken off the hook, teachers unions would go through a significant reduction in power.
It’s a government enforced extortion scam, backed by the same politicians who are the ultimate recipients of a lot of the money stolen from union members in closed shop states.
Just make them “donate” directly to the ‘Rats.
no, and union reps should have to go directly to their members to collect their dues.
No, but Roberts can redefine it as a tax.
The first thing I check on Supreme Court opinions is if the case was decided after Constitution-ignoring FDR nuked the Court with anti-state sovereignty activist justices, yes in the Abood case.
The Constitution says nothing about unions, so this is a 10th Amendment protected state power issue as opposed to the misleading idea that union dues are constitutional.
In other words, it is actually up to a given states legal majority voters imo, not the Constitution per se, as to whether or not union dues are constitutional in a given state. So post-FDR era institutionally indoctrinated justices deceived citizens into thinking that they had no voting power to decide this issue for their state.
If one is a math (NOT arithmetic) or science teacher s/he can do just about anything and get away with it.
If a worker is paying union Dues they should be Fired!
The Constitution will matter little in this case. The court is now too political.
Having been in that situation - and threatened with broken arms if I didn’t pay the union or quit - I strongly object to the use of force in union extortion. Whether the government compels people to pay protection money to the union, or union goons compel people to pay, stealing by force is an act of pure evil.
Just bombard your union reps with petty requests, consume their time daily, they have to represent you if you pay them, so waste their time on petty things.
Came looking to see if someone would whine about Roberts. Left satisfied.
The taxpayers are forced to be essentially a source of money that benefits the democrat politicians in 99% of cases.
Dem politician to union chief: Give me your votes.
Union thug: OK. But it's gonna cost you.
Here are my demands: untouchable, unsustainable pensions, outrageous salaries for union leaders, inability to fire incompetent members, total obedience to any pet political causes we like.
Dem politician: It's a deal. I'll have my fellow cronies vote for taxes to support you.
Just provide the muscle.
(shakes hands)
Labor unions are a criminal enterprise.
Allinsky them to death
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