54°F
weather icon Cloudy

EDITORIAL: The administrative state and the Bill of Rights

The administrative state continues to run amok under President Joe Biden.

Last week, a judge with the National Labor Relations Board found that Amazon CEO Andy Jassy violated federal labor law. His crime? Offering his opinion about the consequences of employees forming a union.

Mr. Jassy in April 2022 had the gall to tell a CNBC host that Amazon employees would be “better off” without a union because it would be harder to “get things done” and they would be less “empowered.” Two months later at a conference where he was interviewed by a Bloomberg TV anchor, Mr. Jassy made similar comments, as he did in November of that year to a New York Times forum.

This resulted in a complaint from union interests, who essentially argued that there is a First Amendment exception for speech made regarding union organizing efforts.

That notion is absurd, of course. Any regulations in the National Labor Relations Act governing union organization campaigns must be interpreted through the lens of the Bill of Rights.

Incredibly, however, Judge Brian D. Gee sided with Big Labor, ruling that Mr. Jassy had engaged in “coercive predictions about the effects of unionization” and made “threatening” comments that were not protected by the First Amendment. He then ordered Mr. Jassy to “cease and desist” from similar statements and mandated that the company post notices at various facilities that included the sentence: “WE WILL NOT threaten you by saying that you would be less empowered if you unionized, that you would find it harder to get things done quickly since unions are slower and more bureaucratic, and that you would be better off without a union.”

Not only did Judge Gee trample upon Mr. Jassy’s free-speech rights, a good case can be made that he went over the line again by compelling Amazon to support a viewpoint directly at odds with its leader’s original assertions.

It’s worth noting that Judge Gee is an administrative law judge for the NLRB. Before his appointment two years ago, he spent 26 years as an attorney for the board. This is the cozy arrangement that characterizes the administrative state on steroids. In-house judges who have a loyalty to the agency they represent and who are employed by the same bureaucracy that prosecutes the alleged violations they hear.

Yes, workers have a right to unionize. But neither labor interests nor management gives up its First Amendment rights during an organization effort.

“If Judge Gee’s decision is left to stand … employers would rightly wonder whether they can speak about unionization at all, despite their legally protected right to do so,” said a statement from the National Retail Federation.

Mr. Jassy should appeal immediately.

MOST READ
Exco Sidebar
Don't miss the big stories. Like us on Facebook.
MORE STORIES
THE LATEST
EDITORIAL: The blue state blues

If blue states want to stop losing residents to red states, they should adopt red state policies.

EDITORIAL: Democrats are quickly back for more

Ms. Cannizzaro assures the taxpayers that, by paying for universal pre-K, “we’re going to see that benefit for years to come.” This is wishful thinking.

COMMENTARY: Smile, they’re monitoring your every move

The issue has become more relevant in Nevada of late, as Henderson and Las Vegas police have installed license plate readers throughout town, and the Legislature will likely again take up the issue of using camera technology to track down red-light runners.