Labor Board Goes After Amazon CEO for Suggesting Workers Might Be 'Better Off' Without Unions
The First Amendment applies even to the CEOs of successful companies, but the NLRB seems to disagree.

Better not read this post out loud to anyone—federal labor regulators might not like it.
The National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) stretched its speech-policing powers to new highs last week when an in-house administrative judge ruled that Amazon CEO Andy Jassy had violated federal labor law by expressing anti-unionization views during several televised interviews in recent years. Specifically, Judge Brian Gee dinged Jassy for suggesting that Amazon employees might be "better off" without a union and the layers of bureaucracy that come with it.
Jassy made those comments during an appearance on CNBC in 2022—during a segment in which he was discussing Amazon's response to ongoing unionization efforts at some warehouses. In the ruling, Gee highlighted similar comments that Jassy made during public forums hosted by The New York Times and Bloomberg.
The First Amendment protects Jassy's right to talk about those things and federal labor law allows employers to discuss unionization as long as they are not harassing or intimidating employees by doing so.
None of that seems to matter to the NLRB. In the ruling, Gee said Jassy had engaged in unlawful "coercive predictions about the effects of unionization" and ordered Amazon to post notices at its facilities reminding workers of their rights.
The punishment isn't really the point, however. Going after Jassy for remarks made in obviously public forums—comments that certainly were not meant to harass or intimidate current or would-be union members—is a signal that the NLRB sees virtually no limit to its powers to police executives' speech.
"Reasonable people may disagree about the line between permissible and impermissible speech" within the bounds of federal labor laws, said Edwin Egee, a vice president at the National Retail Federation, in a statement. "However, if Judge Gee's decision is left to stand, the effect would be to erase this line entirely. Employers would rightly wonder whether they can speak about unionization at all, despite their legally protected right to do so."
Gee's ruling in the Amazon case sits awkwardly alongside other recent rulings by the NLRB that gave wide leeway to employees' speech about similar topics. As the Washington Examiner noted, the NLRB in January forced Amazon to rehire an employee who had been sacked after directing an expletive-laden tirade at a fellow worker.
Meanwhile, some Google employees who were fired after protesting the company's contractual relationship with the state of Israel have filed a complaint with the NLRB asking to be reinstated. The former workers say they were unfairly terminated for engaging in speech that was "directly and explicitly connected to their terms and conditions of work," The Washington Post reported.
It's too soon to know how the NLRB will handle that case, but something has to give. It simply cannot be true that federal labor law permits employees to engage in any and all conduct without consequence, while simultaneously preventing CEOs and employers from speaking freely during media appearances and other public forums.
Federal bureaucrats don't have the authority to decide that all speech is either mandatory or forbidden—and whether they like it or not, the First Amendment applies even to the CEOs of successful businesses.
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Unions are too deeply entrenched in government.
As I said in the earlier unions article, it is a travesty that government forces employers to not hire replacements when workers quit to go on strike, and forces employers to rehire them after the strike is over. It is a huge thumb on the scales, and has nothing to do with freedom of association in forming a union.
This is in addition to allowing unions to be de facto and de jure monopolies, but corporations get broken up all the time just because if you squint just right while crossing blind eyes, you can pretend they have a monopoly in some twisted market segment which no one else recognizes.
No one on the public dole (including companies, public employee unions, defense contractors, etc.) should get to vote on how government funds are spent (e.g. by electing Congressmen).
Only net taxpayers should get a vote. Maybe one vote for each 10K of taxes they pay (less any government benefits or business received).
Just make taxation voluntary.
I've been suggesting this for years ; glad to see someone else picking up the torch.
Hope you get better reception than I've gotten.
The Biden Administration appointees have fairly consistently have established that they believe people who do not agree with their ideology do not have rights, especially speech rights. Labor Unionism is also one of their most sacred cows on this regard.
Boehm strategically supports this
If any set of people made a poster board case for workers needing a union, it is Amazon.
And your evidence for that is what, precisely?
Because there certainly seem to be an awful lot of folks voluntarily applying to work for them desite their alleged working conditions.
Markets are icky and don't count. Anyone who believes in markets is no better than an, ugh, individualist!
Unless markets mean business with Chinese companies.
Your Biden economy is so amazing, why do people need to work at Amazon?
This judge is an employee of the executive branch, as are the people who write the administrative law that he enforces I mean judges. Separation of powers is so quaint.
Which means these "judges" are simply bureaucrats with a misleading title who only have statutory authority and but for Chevron Deference are operating in violation of the 1st Amendment making a ruling like this.
Sure, except that Congress has delegated to the executive bureaucrats the authority to write, enforce, and judge rules with the power of law. I can't find anything in the Constitution that says that is ok, but that dingy piece of parchment has lost all meaning anyway.
The Constitution does not. The courts have developed a doctrine, supposedly based on their collective interpretation of the Constitution that they should give regulatory agencies broad discretion over how they exercise their statutory authority (Chevron Deference). Which means that the legislative branch and the judicial branch have both shirked their duties to reign the executive branch in on this kind of issue.
"Federal bureaucrats don't have the authority to decide that all speech is either mandatory or forbidden—and whether they like it or not, the First Amendment applies even to the CEOs of successful businesses."
Everything you just said is wrong.
How does this relate to Stormy O'Daniel?
She probably fucked everyone involved at some point.
Having a job is better than not having a job, so yeah, unions might ruin your whole day if they cause the company to set up in some other state or country.
The former employees of AMC still blame the company they put out of business (and Lee Iacocca) for going out of business.
Veronique de Rugy better watch her ass.
https://reason.com/2024/05/09/no-unions-arent-having-a-resurgence-and-thats-good-for-workers/
Federal labor law is UN-Constitutional so why wouldn't it continue to violate the 1st Amendment as well. Whatever this nation is it is NOT a USA anymore. It has been conquered by [Na]tional So[zi]alist[s].
I find it baffling that these Nazi's came right out in the open publicly proclaiming their "New Deal" plans to conquer the USA for socialism (still do) yet still these treasonous Nazi's end up in the US Government and seated in the highest courts of the land.
The people threw away their free & just nation to be selfish, greedy and criminal via promises from 'armed-theft' political criminals to get a few pebbles from those 'icky' people.
Workers do not benefit from having their pay skimmed to buy hookers and blow for mobsters and politicians. Fuck the NLRB, they've been a pack of goddamned commie scumbags ever since FDR first set them up.
-jcr
"You're right Judge," Jassy replied, "And as a result, I have now fired all Amazon employees and replaced them with robots. I provided them your home address with their pink slips so they can send thank you cards."
Totally!! Nicely said!
Gee is not a judge. Administrative law judges are bureaucrats pretending to be judges. You don't have to play along.