In split votes, the Senate Labor Committee on Wednesday approved Democratic President Barack Obama's five nominees - three Democrats and two Republicans - for seats on the National Labor Relations Board.
While Democratic Board Chairman Mark Gaston Pearce and Republican board nominees Harry Johnson and Phillip Miscimarra sailed through, two others didn’t.
And the almost party-line votes on Democratic nominees Sharon Block and Richard Griffin, the former Operating Engineers general counsel, presage another partisan war on the Senate floor over the labor board and its future.
Union leaders urged the full Senate to act quickly and approve all five, before the NLRB runs out of legal members in August. Confirming a full board is important to workers, union and non-union alike, said both Communications Workers President Larry Cohen and committee chairman Tom Harkin, D-Iowa. The board oversees all aspects of labor-management relations for most U.S. workers, including workers’ rights to unionize, how they communicate with each other and who can be in bargaining units.
“While today’s vote moves these five qualified nominees out of committee, the protection of labor law for 80 million private sector workers remains undecided until the Senate acts,” Cohen said. “Workers deserve a strong, functioning and full-strength NLRB, not more Senate gridlock. After recess, the Senate should debate and confirm all five to ensure a fully functional NLRB so workers have the full protection of the law. Workers, both union and non-union alike, can’t afford to wait any longer.”
A quick vote is important. The board now has three members: Pearce, Griffin and Block. Griffin and Block are “recess appointees” Obama named to the NLRB in Jan. 2012 after Senate GOP filibusters defeated his permanent nominees. Pearce’s present term expires August 27, and the board would not have enough members to act and “would effectively shut down,” Harkin said.
And the federal appeals court in D.C. ruled in January 2013 the recess appointments are illegal, and thus the board illegally decided 919 cases since January 2012. The Labor Committee’s top Republican, Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn., said the ruling means Obama violates the Senate’s “advise and consent” powers in the Constitution.
Alexander said he would vote against both Griffin and Block, who he also accused of violating the Constitution. But he did not openly threaten to filibuster them. He again called on them to resign now. Other federal appeals courts have split on the recess appointments issue and the whole mess is headed for the Supreme Court.
“This is an Alice in Wonderland approach: Verdict first, trial later,” Harkin replied.
“Why should they (Griffin and Block) lose their jobs and be forced to resign when we don’t know the outcome?” of the lawsuit challenging them, he asked.
On the other hand, Alexander promised if Obama sent up two replacements for Griffin and Block, he would move quickly with Harkin to get them confirmed, too. Alexander again said the two should quit their jobs now, because they’re illegal.
“What we’re missing in this debate is whether the board should be able to function,” Sen. Bob Casey, D-Pa., said. “There are people in this town who want to shut it down…Where is there any assertion that it should shut down because of the courts?”
Harkin told Press Associates Union News Service after the session that he would talk to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., about scheduling votes on all five before the lawmakers’ August recess. “But we’ll have to wait and see” whether the GOP filibusters them, he added. In a conference call last week with CWA activists, however, Harkin predicted a filibuster would occur.
The committee voted 18-4 for Pearce, with Sens. Richard Burr, R-N.C., Rand Paul, R-Kent., Tim Scott, R-S.C., and Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, voting no. The other six Republicans voted for Pearce. GOP nominees Johnson and Miscimarra passed 22-0.
Griffin and Block each won 13-9, with Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, joining all 12 Democrats. Alaska has a high concentration of unionists. Crossover votes helped her to an upset independent write-in win in 2010 over a Tea Partyite GOP nominee.
For the same reasons Cohen and Harkin mentioned, AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka previously urged senators to quickly confirm all five, though the fed strongly disagrees with Johnson and Miscimarra, both management-side labor lawyers.
And United Food and Commercial Workers President/Change To Win Chair Joe Hansen blamed the GOP for the mess. “Senate Republicans made a mockery of their constitutional responsibility to advise and consent on nominations to the NLRB,” he said. “They made obstruction an art form.
“Obama could nominate (Senate GOP leader) Mitch McConnell to the NLRB and Senate Republicans would still likely block him. Their motive is clear: They do not believe in the right to organize and resent the agency charged with protecting workers is actually doing its job,” Hansen concluded.
This article was written by Press Associates, Inc., news service. Used by permission.
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In split votes, the Senate Labor Committee on Wednesday approved Democratic President Barack Obama’s five nominees – three Democrats and two Republicans – for seats on the National Labor Relations Board.
While Democratic Board Chairman Mark Gaston Pearce and Republican board nominees Harry Johnson and Phillip Miscimarra sailed through, two others didn’t.
And the almost party-line votes on Democratic nominees Sharon Block and Richard Griffin, the former Operating Engineers general counsel, presage another partisan war on the Senate floor over the labor board and its future.
Union leaders urged the full Senate to act quickly and approve all five, before the NLRB runs out of legal members in August. Confirming a full board is important to workers, union and non-union alike, said both Communications Workers President Larry Cohen and committee chairman Tom Harkin, D-Iowa. The board oversees all aspects of labor-management relations for most U.S. workers, including workers’ rights to unionize, how they communicate with each other and who can be in bargaining units.
“While today’s vote moves these five qualified nominees out of committee, the protection of labor law for 80 million private sector workers remains undecided until the Senate acts,” Cohen said. “Workers deserve a strong, functioning and full-strength NLRB, not more Senate gridlock. After recess, the Senate should debate and confirm all five to ensure a fully functional NLRB so workers have the full protection of the law. Workers, both union and non-union alike, can’t afford to wait any longer.”
A quick vote is important. The board now has three members: Pearce, Griffin and Block. Griffin and Block are “recess appointees” Obama named to the NLRB in Jan. 2012 after Senate GOP filibusters defeated his permanent nominees. Pearce’s present term expires August 27, and the board would not have enough members to act and “would effectively shut down,” Harkin said.
And the federal appeals court in D.C. ruled in January 2013 the recess appointments are illegal, and thus the board illegally decided 919 cases since January 2012. The Labor Committee’s top Republican, Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn., said the ruling means Obama violates the Senate’s “advise and consent” powers in the Constitution.
Alexander said he would vote against both Griffin and Block, who he also accused of violating the Constitution. But he did not openly threaten to filibuster them. He again called on them to resign now. Other federal appeals courts have split on the recess appointments issue and the whole mess is headed for the Supreme Court.
“This is an Alice in Wonderland approach: Verdict first, trial later,” Harkin replied.
“Why should they (Griffin and Block) lose their jobs and be forced to resign when we don’t know the outcome?” of the lawsuit challenging them, he asked.
On the other hand, Alexander promised if Obama sent up two replacements for Griffin and Block, he would move quickly with Harkin to get them confirmed, too. Alexander again said the two should quit their jobs now, because they’re illegal.
“What we’re missing in this debate is whether the board should be able to function,” Sen. Bob Casey, D-Pa., said. “There are people in this town who want to shut it down…Where is there any assertion that it should shut down because of the courts?”
Harkin told Press Associates Union News Service after the session that he would talk to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., about scheduling votes on all five before the lawmakers’ August recess. “But we’ll have to wait and see” whether the GOP filibusters them, he added. In a conference call last week with CWA activists, however, Harkin predicted a filibuster would occur.
The committee voted 18-4 for Pearce, with Sens. Richard Burr, R-N.C., Rand Paul, R-Kent., Tim Scott, R-S.C., and Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, voting no. The other six Republicans voted for Pearce. GOP nominees Johnson and Miscimarra passed 22-0.
Griffin and Block each won 13-9, with Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, joining all 12 Democrats. Alaska has a high concentration of unionists. Crossover votes helped her to an upset independent write-in win in 2010 over a Tea Partyite GOP nominee.
For the same reasons Cohen and Harkin mentioned, AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka previously urged senators to quickly confirm all five, though the fed strongly disagrees with Johnson and Miscimarra, both management-side labor lawyers.
And United Food and Commercial Workers President/Change To Win Chair Joe Hansen blamed the GOP for the mess. “Senate Republicans made a mockery of their constitutional responsibility to advise and consent on nominations to the NLRB,” he said. “They made obstruction an art form.
“Obama could nominate (Senate GOP leader) Mitch McConnell to the NLRB and Senate Republicans would still likely block him. Their motive is clear: They do not believe in the right to organize and resent the agency charged with protecting workers is actually doing its job,” Hansen concluded.
This article was written by Press Associates, Inc., news service. Used by permission.