कोशिश गोल्ड - मुक्त

Ex-NLRB chair envisions a slog for labor

Los Angeles Times

|

October 02, 2025

AS THE COUNTRY lurches from the Biden administration—perhaps the most pro-labor White House in American history — to the ferociously antilabor Trump administration, one agency stands in the way of the transition.

- MICHAEL HILTZIK COLUMNIST

Ex-NLRB chair envisions a slog for labor

LABOR expert William Gould, right, speaks in 2023 to friend Dusty Baker, then the Houston Astros manager.

(MICHAEL ZAGARIS Getty Images)

It’s the National Labor Relations Board, created in 1935 as a quintessential New Deal regulatory agency. Unfortunately for workers, today, 90 years since its creation, the board is facing an existential threat from Big Business and from a Supreme Court that seems inclined to diminish its authority. Its ability to fight back, however, is burdened by partisan politics and its own history.

That's the view of William B. Gould IV, who served as the board’s chair during the Clinton administration. He views the NLRB's future with “the greatest pessimism,” he says.

Having left the board in 1998, Gould, 89, has kept a weather eye on the agency from his perchas a professor at Stanford Law School, which he first joined in 1972 and where he currently holds an emeritus chair.

“I view what's happening today as part of a continuum,” Gould told me this week. “Since the early 1980s, Congress has attempted to politicize the board to relitigate the assumptions about labor-management relations that got the National Labor Relations Act enacted in 1935. That drum has just gotten louder and louder.”

The key assumption in 1935 was that, in the words of the act’s preamble, “the denial by some employers of the right of employees to organize and the refusal by some employers to accept the procedure of collective bargaining” had led to “strikes and other forms of industrial strife or unrest,” which in turn obstructed commerce.

Accordingly, the act’s very purpose was to protect the workers’ collective bargaining rights — their right to unionize and through a union to negotiate wages and working conditions.

But the act left it up to the board to decide for itself what constitutes an “unfair labor practice” obstructing unionization rights, which the law prohibits.

Los Angeles Times से और कहानियाँ

Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles Times

STORM TROOPERS

Trojans overcome poor start as Lemon and stingy defense keep playoff hopes intact

time to read

3 mins

November 16, 2025

Los Angeles Times

Lebanon plans to file complaint over Israeli wall in its territory

UNIFIL says the construction violates a resolution ending Israel-Hezbollah war.

time to read

1 mins

November 16, 2025

Los Angeles Times

Islamic State-backed rebels kill 17 in attack on eastern Congo hospital

An Islamic State-backed rebel group killed at least 17 people in an attack on a hospital in eastern Congo, authorities said Saturday.

time to read

1 min

November 16, 2025

Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles Times

Hungary will challenge EU over the phasing out of Russian energy

Hungary will challenge the European Union's plan to end Russian energy imports and take the case to an EU court, Prime Minister Viktor Orban said Friday.

time to read

1 mins

November 16, 2025

Los Angeles Times

Brother is seeking help with living trust. How to respond?

Dear Liz: My older brother and his wife recently told me they made me the executor of their living trust.

time to read

3 mins

November 16, 2025

Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles Times

Rural areas fight AT&T's effort to drop landlines

Carrier is pushing to cut copper service. But remote enclaves say it's their lifeline.

time to read

8 mins

November 16, 2025

Los Angeles Times

Iamaleava concussed, sits out against Buckeyes

All those hits finally caught up with Nico Iamaleava.

time to read

2 mins

November 16, 2025

Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles Times

UC students want bigger say on Board of Regents

The University of California serves 300,000 students, yet only one of the two students on the 26-member Board of Regents is allowed to vote. Now student leaders are campaigning for a second vote, saying it would better ensure that UC policy reflects all students.

time to read

6 mins

November 16, 2025

Los Angeles Times

Ex-Newsom aide's indictment prompts scrutiny

Becerra, have agreed to plead guilty to related charges.

time to read

6 mins

November 16, 2025

Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles Times

THIS YEAR MAKE A MEXICAN-INSPIRED THANKSGIVING FEAST

Every year on Thanksgiving, I can count on my mother to tell the story of her first year living in Tijuana, when my dad, who was born in Mexico City, said to her: “Mami, I want you to make a traditional American Thanksgiving feast so we can show our friends here how your people celebrate.”

time to read

11 mins

November 16, 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size