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Labor Board Bans Anti-Union ‘Captive Audience’ Meetings

Federal labor officials issued a ruling Wednesday prohibiting employers from holding mandatory anti-union meetings at work, a long-sought policy objective of unions that want to level the playing field with corporations in organizing campaigns.

In its 3-1 decision, the Democratic majority of the National Labor Relations Board said such workplace gatherings — often called “captive audience” meetings due to their obligatory nature — tend to “coerce” employees and therefore violate the law. The board’s lone Republican dissented.

The case revolved around the Amazon warehouse in New York City that became the retailer’s first to unionize 2 1/2 years ago. Amazon enlisted managers and outside consultants to hold meetings where they fed employees anti-union talking points in the run-up to the vote. The company spent millions on its campaign against the union.

NLRB General Counsel Jennifer Abruzzo, an appointee of President Joe Biden, has argued that the meetings violate workers’ rights when employees have no choice but to attend and subject themselves to the company’s messaging. Abruzzo, who prosecutes cases before the board, has said companies should still be free to make their case against unions — they just shouldn’t be able to force workers to listen to it.

In siding with Abruzzo and the Amazon workers, the board members overturned decades-old NLRB precedent that allowed for mandatory attendance under threat of punishment. They also set up what could be a protracted legal fight over the ruling, with employer groups all but certain to challenge the decision on First Amendment grounds.

NLRB General Counsel Jennifer Abruzzo pursued the ban on "captive audience" meetings.
NLRB General Counsel Jennifer Abruzzo pursued the ban on “captive audience” meetings.

Bloomberg via Getty Images

The NLRB, an independent agency that enforces collective bargaining law, has pursued an aggressive pro-worker agenda in the Biden years, making it easier for workers to form unions and more costly for employers to illegally break them. The current NLRB’s union- and worker-friendly leanings are probably one reason more employees are filing union petitions and unfair labor practice charges against their companies.

But that era is likely coming to a close following President-elect Donald Trump’s victory last week.

Trump is expected to fire Abruzzo on his first day in office and nominate a general counsel who will undo much of her agenda. (The general counsel he installed during his first presidency was hostile to unions and stood accused of trying to gut his own agency.) Trump will also be able to change the board, which normally has five members, to a Republican majority as its staggered seats open up during his presidency.

A new general counsel and Republican-led board would also be able to overturn the ban on captive audience meetings and other key rulings made by their Democratic predecessors. The general counsel would need to find new cases and present them to the board in order to reverse precedent.

Unions sometimes have a hard time countering captive audience meetings since they don’t have similar, guaranteed access to the workforce to make their case for unionization. They are relegated to holding voluntary offsite meetings or doing house calls, while employers can hold mandatory PowerPoint presentations as frequently as they like.

In an interview last year, Abruzzo told HuffPost she believed captive audience meetings are inherently coercive because of the power dynamic between employer and employee.

“There is a threat. … It’s inherent because these workers are economically dependent upon their employer,” she said. “They have no true ability to exercise their right to refrain without fear of some sort of reprisal.”

Several Democratic-led states have pursued their own bans on captive audience meetings, with California being the most recent. Those laws are being challenged, however, with employers arguing they violate employers’ First Amendment rights and also conflict with federal labor law.