When Scalia Died, So Did ‘Friedrichs’—And an Even Grander Scheme
To Destroy Unions
Moshe Z. Marvit
Monday, February 15, 2016
Working In These Times
Conservatives had a great plan in motion to decimate unions. If
Justice Antonin Scalia hadn’t died in his sleep, they almost certainly would
have pulled it off.
First they got the Court to rule their way in 2014’s Harris v. Quinn [1], which
targeted home healthcare unions. Like "right to work"
laws, the case sought to gut unions’ funding and
diminish solidarity by saying that union members can’t be required to
pay dues. The Court agreed, holding that the First Amendment does not
allow the collection of fair share fees from home healthcare workers. The
decision, written by Justice Alito and signed by the Court’s four other
conservatives, also not-so-subtly invited further attacks on the funding
and membership of unions.
Next came Friedrichs v. California Teachers Association,
which sought to expand Harris to impose right-to-work on all
public sector employees. The conservative Center for Individual Rights (CIR)
rushed Friedrichs to the Supreme Court by essentially
conceding at every lower court that under current law, it should lose. Friedrichs could
only win if the Supreme Court overturned 39 years of precedent that date back
to the 1977 Abood v. Detroit Board of Education decision.
When the Court accepted Friedrichs, there was some
hope that Justice Scalia might provide the critical vote to save public-sector
unions. This was not because Scalia had any great love for labor—he did not—but
because he understood the basic economic theory of free riders: Just like any
other enterprise, it can be difficult for a union to get its members to pay
dues when they can get all the benefits of the contract for free. Scalia had
said as much in a 1991 concurrence-dissent, and many were hoping that he would
exercise consistency with Friedrichs.
However, the oral arguments on Friedrichs last
month destroyed any such illusions. Justice Scalia, never coy about his
beliefs, made it clear that he now believed that fair share fees should be
eliminated. Though it’s often difficult to divine the Court’s final decision
from oral arguments, it was plain after the Friedrichs arguments
that labor would lose.
Accordingly, labor was scrambling to figure out how best to run a
union in a post-Friedrichs world. Meanwhile, conservatives already
had a plan in the works to expand what they saw as a certain win.
Last week, in a little-noticed case called D’Agostino v.
Baker, the National Right to Work Legal Defense Foundation lost at the First Circuit [2]in their
attempt to argue that the First Amendment does not allow exclusive
representation of home healthcare workers. This case sought to expand
the Harris holding by arguing that the First
Amendment prohibits home healthcare unions not only from
collecting fees from workers who don’t want to pay, but also
from bargaining on behalf of any worker who doesn't opt to be a
member.
Former Supreme Court Justice David Souter wrote the decision for
the First Circuit in D’Agnostino, relying heavily on Abood and
its progeny. If history is any indication, National Right to Work was planning
on appealing this case to the Supreme Court. The case provided a glimpse
of what the likely post-Friedrichs plan of attack would have been:
After you win on the dues front, go after membership.
In addition, other cases, such as Bain v. CTA [3], that
attacked the membership rights of unions but had been thrown out by lower
courts, were likely to reappear.
However, on Saturday it was reported that Justice Scalia had been
found dead. With his absence from the Court, conservative plans to attack union
dues and membership through Supreme Court challenges may have dissolved
for now.
If President Obama can get a new justice confirmed by a
Republican-controlled Senate and that justice is permitted to take part
in Friedrichs, then the case will likely be decided 5-4 in favor of
labor. If Republicans leaders made good on their vow to thwart any
nomination by Obama, or the new justice does not take part in Friedrichs—either
because the Court decides not to set it for rehearing or the justice must
recuse herself—then all indications are that the case will be decided 4-4. In
the event of such a tie, the lower court ruling is upheld—in this instance, the
9th Circuit’s dismissal of the case.
When the Supreme Court ties 4-4, no precedent is set. Anyone in
labor worried about that outcome in Friedrichs can rest a bit
easier remembering that no precedent is needed here. Abood created
the precedent in 1977, and Friedrichs was a shameless
ideological ploy to overturn that longstanding precedent. In Friedrichs,
the CIR did not present the Supreme Court with the typical grounds for review:
either a “a circuit split,” where lower courts issued conflicting decisions, or
proof that circumstances had changed so significantly since Abood that
the Supreme Court needed to reconsider its ruling. (Justice Stephen Breyer
pointed to the absurdity of the Court overruling good case law for no good
reason when he asked in oral arguments whether the Court should also revisit
its landmark 1803 decision in Marbury v. Madison, which helped set
the very terms of judicial review.)
Therefore, unlike other cases on the Court’s docket, if Friedrichs goes
away quietly, it will stay gone until there is another conservative majority.
Without a Friedrichs decision that bans fair
share fees, it is unlikely the Supreme Court would accept D’Agostino, and
even less likely that it would decide against labor in such a case. Other cases
attacking the membership rules of unions on specious Constitutional grounds are
similarly unlikely to make it to the Supreme Court. With Justice Scalia’s
unexpected death, conservatives will have to go back to attacking labor the
old-fashioned way: at the state and federal legislatures.
Moshe Z. Marvit is an attorney and fellow
with The Century Foundation and the co-author (with Richard Kahlenberg) of the
book Why Labor Organizing Should be a Civil Right [4].
Links:
[1] http://inthesetimes.com/working/entry/16898/what_harris_means_for_workers_rights
[2] http://media.ca1.uscourts.gov/pdf.opinions/15-1433P-01A.pdf
[3] http://inthesetimes.com/working/entry/17887/in_major_anti_labor_case_union_busters_no_longer_even_pretend_unions_dont_b
[4] http://tcf.org/bookstore/detail/why-labor-organizing-should-be-a-civil-right
[2] http://media.ca1.uscourts.gov/pdf.opinions/15-1433P-01A.pdf
[3] http://inthesetimes.com/working/entry/17887/in_major_anti_labor_case_union_busters_no_longer_even_pretend_unions_dont_b
[4] http://tcf.org/bookstore/detail/why-labor-organizing-should-be-a-civil-right
- See more at: https://portside.org/print/node/10884#sthash.bH4dSS2J.dpuf
Donations can be sent
to the Baltimore Nonviolence Center, 325 E. 25th St., Baltimore, MD
21218. Ph: 410-323-1607; Email: mobuszewski [at] verizon.net. Go to http://baltimorenonviolencecenter.blogspot.com/
"The master class
has always declared the wars; the subject class has always fought the battles.
The master class has had all to gain and nothing to lose, while the subject
class has had nothing to gain and everything to lose--especially their
lives." Eugene Victor Debs
No comments:
Post a Comment