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Date: March 17, 2025 at 20:50:02
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Trump to Pick Union-Busting Attorney for Key Labor Law Position

URL: https://prospect.org/labor/2025-03-17-trump-pick-union-busting-attorney-key-labor-law-position-nlrb/


Trump to Pick Union-Busting Attorney for Key Labor Law Position

The National Labor Relations Board general counsel is a key policymaker
shaping labor law. Crystal Carey, an attorney at anti-union firm Morgan Lewis, is
the apparent choice.

BY DAVID DAYEN MARCH 17, 2025

The Trump administration will choose a partner at the notorious anti-union law
firm Morgan Lewis to be the next general counsel of the National Labor
Relations Board, multiple sources tell the Prospect.

Crystal Carey is a former NLRB official from 2009 to 2018; she started as an
intern with the Board and moved up to senior counsel, working on the Board
and general counsel sides of the office. She became a partner last year at
Morgan Lewis, which has been one of the most powerful management-side law
firms in the country since the 1950s. Morgan Lewis attorneys have been
involved in some of the most prominent labor battles in America since then,
from the 1981 air traffic controllers strike to efforts by McDonald’s to resist the
Fight for $15.

One of Morgan Lewis’s biggest current clients is Amazon, which used
algorithmic management and surveillance tactics to prevent unionization at its
warehouse in Bessemer, Alabama, in 2021. Amazon also has an active lawsuit
that seeks to declare the NLRB unconstitutional.

Carey, who is in her early forties, has been at Morgan Lewis since leaving the
NLRB in 2018, mostly as a trial attorney. She became a partner last October.
While union sources had heard that Carey’s name was “in the mix” for the
critical NLRB general counsel position, she is not a high-profile person in the
labor world.

It is unclear when the announcement will formally be made. The White House
did not respond to a request for comment.

The selection would confirm that any talk of the second term of President
Trump being in any way pro-labor was largely lip service or sheer fantasy. That
was already fairly clear with the mass gutting of federal agencies though large-
scale firings of workers, actions often at odds with federal employee
protections. But hiring an attorney of a go-to union-busting law firm to
administer labor law in the U.S. makes Trump’s position crystal clear.

Though some labor leaders, like Teamsters President Sean O’Brien, have hailed
the confirmation of Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer, who has in the past
supported legislation that would make it easier for unions to win workplace
elections, the reality is that labor secretary is not a big policymaking job, at least
not compared to the NLRB general counsel. The general counsel sets priorities
for NLRB cases, which govern union elections and rights in the workplace. The
Labor Department has important priorities as well, but the work to end the slide
in union density in the United States really begins at the NLRB.


The Teamsters did not return a request for comment on Carey’s pending
appointment.

Under Biden’s GC Jennifer Abruzzo, the NLRB pursued an agenda that sought
to level the balance of power between unions and management in America.
During Abruzzo’s tenure, the NLRB reversed 12 decisions from Trump’s first
term that weakened worker rights and made it harder to organize. It also
banned “captive audience” meetings (where workers must listen to anti-union
arguments from management), outlawed the practice of management claiming
that unionized workers cannot bring grievances directly to supervisors, and
determined that if a company commits unfair labor practices during a union
election, then the union is automatically recognized and the employer must
begin bargaining of a first contract. Another Abruzzo-led initiative, allowing
workers to recover greater damages from being illegally fired for protected
activities, was overturned in the courts.


When he took office in January, Trump fired Abruzzo and Board chair Gwynne
Wilcox. The latter discharge was deemed illegal by a federal court, and Wilcox
is now back on the job, giving the NLRB a temporary 2-to-1 Democratic Board
majority. But Trump has the ability to appoint two members to the Board,
putting it in Republican hands again.

With Carey as the general counsel, the Board will likely go about reinstating
actions from Trump’s first term, and reversing Abruzzo’s initiatives. Given her
background, Carey can be expected to be a cipher for management’s wishes.

There are certainly some people in the White House and the Republican Party
more broadly who are not as rigidly opposed to organized labor, and may even
support collective bargaining in certain cases. But that’s certainly not the
prevailing opinion, as the installation of a Morgan Lewis lawyer as NLRB general
counsel reinforces. If this appointment is any indication, the next four years look
bleak for workers seeking to organize.

DAVID DAYEN
David Dayen is the Prospect’s executive editor. His work has appeared in The
Intercept, The New Republic, HuffPost, The Washington Post, the Los Angeles
Times, and more. His most recent book is ‘Monopolized: Life in the Age of
Corporate Power.’


Responses:
[446937]


446937


Date: March 18, 2025 at 08:17:28
From: The Hierophant, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Trump to Pick Union-Busting Attorney for Key Labor Law Position


No surprise - hope the unions who voted for him are happy
- he is going to do his best to either bust them or make
their lives miserable...
I just read an article this morning about his visit to
the Kennedy center - he was complaining that they
couldn't have some one hit wonder country artist there
because of the cost and that it was too expensive to pay
all the workers there (who are union)...setting it up for
that lob shot


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