Supreme Court says Trump doesn’t have to rehire independent labor board members for now
- The Supreme Court allowed the Trump administration to remove two board members overseeing independent agencies, pausing a federal appeals court ruling that temporarily restored them to their jobs.
- The immediate issue is whether the board members, appointed by President Joe Biden, can remain in their positions during ongoing legal disputes.
- Solicitor General D. John Sauer indicated that the Supreme Court could hear arguments in May and issue a decision by early summer.
- The core issue is whether the board members can remain in their roles while the court examines a 90-year-old case regarding presidential authority to fire independent board members.
105 Articles
105 Articles
Attorney General Raoul Co-Leads Coalition Asking Court To Preserve National Labor Relations Board – RiverBender (Alton)
“The National Labor Relations Board helps to ensure that workers in Illinois and across the country are afforded the rights they are entitled to under federal law,” Raoul said. “Removing the board’s ability to function creates a regulatory vacuum that would undermine workers’ rights and prevent the NLRB from ensuring stable labor relations."


USC Follows Amazon and Musk’s SpaceX in Calling Labor Board Unconstitutional
To block a union that would represent 2,500 faculty members, the private university echoed a corporate argument. The post USC Follows Amazon and Musk’s SpaceX in Calling Labor Board Unconstitutional appeared first on .
Chief Justice Roberts bars Wilcox from NLRB again
WASHINGTON—Gwynne Wilcox, the outstanding African American pro-labor leader thrown off the National Labor Relations Board by Trump, thereby freezing that body into inaction, was reinstated by the courts but now Chief Justice Roberts of the Supreme Court, doing the bidding of MAGA, has kicked her off again. Republican President Donald Trump, no fan of people of color and workers, bounced Wilcox from her National Labor Relations Board seat in late…
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