The Daily Signal - A Look at Judge Jackson's Record on Unions
Episode Date: March 24, 2022President Joe Biden’s Supreme Court nominee, Ketanji Brown Jackson, has come under fire for her positions on child porn sentencing, court stacking, and immigration. Now David Osborne, CEO of America...ns for Fair Treatment, tells "The Daily Signal Podcast" that Jackson has another controversial position: her views on labor. "Even taking Ketanji Brown Jackson at her best, she's got new judicial philosophies. She's got her own view on the First Amendment and how it should work. She's definitely got her own perspective on how federal sector bargaining should work," says Osborne. "And she's going to bring that to the court. And she may drive some of these issues. I think unions are getting what they're paying for." Osborne joins the show to discuss those concerns, and what they could mean if Jackson is confirmed to the court. We also cover these stories: Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., gets into a heated confrontation with Jackson on her third day of hearings. The Oklahoma House passes a bill banning medically unnecessary abortions. Madeleine Albright, who served as secretary of state under President Bill Clinton, dies at 84. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is the Daily Signal podcast for Thursday, March 24th.
I'm Kate Trinko.
And I'm Doug Blair.
President Biden's Supreme Court nominee Katanji Brown Jackson has come under fire for her positions on child porn sentencing, court stacking, and immigration.
But one less known concern about the judge's history are her positions on labor.
CEO of Americans for Fair Treatment, David Osborne, joins the show to discuss those concerns
and what it could mean if she's confirmed to the court.
But before we get to Doug's interview, let's hit our top news stories of today.
Wednesday marked the third day of confirmation hearings for President Biden's Supreme Court nominee Katanji Brown Jackson.
During Wednesday's hearing, Senator Lindsay Graham, Republican from South Carolina, got into a heated discussion with Jackson over sentencing standards for child sex offenders.
Here's some of that exchange via Fox News.
Senator, with respect to the computer, one of the most effective deterrence,
is one that I imposed in every case and that judges across the country impose in every case,
which is substantial, substantial supervision.
Any of these defendants?
You think it is a bigger deterrent to take somebody who's on a computer
looking at sexual images of children in the most disgusting way
is to supervise their computer habits versus putting them in jail?
No, Senator.
I didn't say versus.
exactly what you said. I think the best way to deter people from getting on a computer and viewing
thousands and hundreds and over time maybe millions the population of the whole of children being exploited and
abused every time somebody clicks on is to put their ass in jail, not supervise their computer usage.
Senator, I wasn't talking about verses. You just said you thought it was a deterrent to supervise them.
I don't think it's a deterrent.
I think the deterrent is putting them in jail.
The sentencing have a deterrent component.
Senator, would you let her respond?
Yes.
Graham also grilled Jackson on her judgment
during a case involving immigration.
So this is an example to me,
and you may not agree,
where the plain language of the statute
was completely wiped out by you.
You reached a conclusion
because you disagreed with the Trump administration,
and the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals said,
As I've quoted just a minute ago, there could hardly be a more definitive expression of congressional intent to lead the decision about the scope of expedited removal within the statute of bounds to the secretary's independent judgment.
That, to me, is Exhibit A of activism.
Finally, Graham asked Jackson if she'd watched the hearings for Justice Brett Kavanaugh and how she would feel if she were treated the same way Democrats and,
treated him.
Did you watch the Kavanaugh hearings?
No, sir.
Are you familiar what happened in the Kavanaugh hearings?
Generally.
Senator, your time is...
Well, please, Mr. Chairman.
So to be honest, it's a minute and 47 seconds.
She filibustered every question I had,
and she has the right to give an answer,
but I'm trying to make a point in 20 minutes.
You were here for Kavanaugh.
If she's confused about what happened,
some people on the other side had an accusation
against Judge Kavanaugh that during high school, he sexually assaulted somebody.
And the rest is history.
That was known to the people on the other side and never revealed during the meetings they had
with Judge Kavanaugh.
It was literally ambushed.
He was ambushed.
How would you feel if we did that to you?
The last day of confirmation hearings are today.
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell criticized Jackson for her comments about court packing.
Here's what McConnell had to say on the first.
Senate Floor Wednesday via his Twitter account.
The far-left fringe groups that promoted Judge Jackson for this vacancy want Democrats
to destroy the court's legitimacy through partisan court packing for unconstitutional term
limits.
She was literally the court packers pick for the seat, and she has repeatedly refused to reject
their position.
Both the liberal legal giants, Justice Ginsburg, and Justice Breyer, had no problem, no problem,
defending the court and denouncing court packing.
Both Ginsburg and Breyer denounced court packing.
As sitting justices, they commented freely on the subject.
The justices knew that expressing a clear view and defending their institution was not,
I repeat, not judicially inappropriate in any way.
But Judge Jackson has refused to follow in the footsteps of Ginsburg and Breyer.
She refuses to rule out what the radical activists want.
The leftist group demand justice has advocated for Jackson to be.
be a Supreme Court nominee and is now making ad buys and support of her. On their website,
Demand Justice States. With a 6.3 Republican supermajority, the Supreme Court is too biased in favor
of special interests and Republican politicians. Our democracy is at risk from decisions that
suppress the right to vote. Adding four seats is the solution, and we need your help to get it done.
Congress can change the number of justices on the court at any time with a simple piece.
of legislation, and it has done so many times throughout American history.
On Tuesday, the Oklahoma State House passed a bill banning all medically unnecessary abortions
in the state. The legislation is similar to a bill passed recently in Texas and would rely on
individual citizens to file lawsuits against anyone performing, aiding, or attending to assist
a medically unnecessary abortion. Per the Washington Examiner, plaintiffs can receive at least
$10,000 for each abortion performed by a defendant or that they assisted in.
Abortions performed to save the life of the mother would still be protected.
The bill is currently on its way to the Oklahoma State Senate.
Madeline Albright, who served as Secretary of State for President Bill Clinton, died Wednesday.
She was 84.
Prior to becoming Secretary of State, Albright served as ambassador to the United Nations,
also in the Clinton administration.
She was born in the former Czechoslovakia and came to the U.S. as a refugee in 1948 after
communists took control of Czechoslovakia.
Her family's statement said that she died of cancer.
Now stay tuned for my conversation with David Osborne as we discuss Katanji Brown Jackson and
public sector unions.
Do you have an interest in public policy?
Do you want to hear lectures from some of the biggest names in American politics?
The Heritage Foundation hosts webinars called
heritage events live. These events are free and open to the public. To find the latest heritage events
and to register, visit heritage.org slash events. My guest today is David Osborne, CEO of Americans
for Fair Treatment, a national nonprofit that works to educate public sector employees about their
constitutional rights around union membership. David, welcome to the show. Well done, Doug. Thanks.
Very much appreciate your coming here. So I'd like to talk to you a little bit about,
the kind of top news story right now, which is President Biden's potential nominee to the Supreme Court,
Katanji Brown Jackson.
You've stated about Katanji Brown herself that she's a bit of a problem.
You say, I can't think of a judge who's done more for public sector unions in the relatively
short period of time that KBJ, Katanji Brown Jackson, has been on the bench.
Of course, Biden selected someone that unions favored.
He owes it to them.
Can you expand on that?
Yeah, well, we're here talking about the nation's most powerful special interest groups.
It's the labor unions.
And I want to make the case to you today that labor unions political influence goes right to the top
that Kintagia Brown Jackson in this case is the nominee because she is the union-favored nominee.
This is the most pro-union president we've had.
Those are his words.
During the 2020 election cycle, unions spent 244 million in direct contributions to Joe Biden and 1.8 billion in
total political spending. So we're talking about getting out the vote efforts, uncoordinated
expenditures, and of course, direct campaign contributions as well. Recall, I don't know if you've
seen the documentary about Justice Clarence Thomas and about his confirmation proceedings.
What was, I think, obvious to a lot of people at the time but was really explicit in that
documentary was that the opposition to Justice Thomas's confirmation.
which ended up including the NAACP really only got a full head of steam after the AFL-CIO asked for it.
They were the ones who directed all of this.
Just like that today, out of all of the qualified candidates that President Biden could have selected,
he happened to select the union favored nominee, and he did it for a very political reason.
And you're saying that the political reason is because unions are the most powerful political force driving,
both parties or driving the Democrats or?
Driving the Democrats in particular.
But they've been a powerful player and even with Republicans as well.
A good friend of mine says that they'll rent a Republican until they can buy a Democrat.
What they've done, they've read Kintaghi Brown Jackson's opinions.
She's out there about this stuff.
At best, she's got a profound misunderstanding of public sector labor law that tilts towards
the unions.
At worst, she's done some cynical things, political maneuver.
in order to get where she's gotten today and she's impressed the unions along the way.
So one of the things that obviously you look at when a judge is going up for this type of position is the work that they've done on cases, the way that they've ruled, the way that they've sort of shown their jurisprudence.
Are there any particular cases that Judge Jackson has shown she's going to be more pro-union than not?
Yeah, here's what got her on the map.
In 2018, President Trump issued three executive orders that were meant to deal with longstanding problems with.
unions in the federal government. You probably know this, but there are three million federal
employees, a vast administrative state, and unions get a cut of that action. They were invited
into the federal government by Kennedy back in the 60s, and they've been there ever since.
They've sort of, their role has metastasized. They've used their power and influence as unions
in the federal government to get more, many times direct spending from the federal government.
But in 2018, Trump meant to deal with that by issuing three executive orders.
Just a month later, 17 separate federal employee unions filed four separate lawsuits.
And they all ended up in front of Katanji Brown Jackson.
Kentucky Brown Jackson.
Interesting.
And the way that she ruled in those cases indicated that she was more in favor of.
of the unions than the Trump administration?
She wrote a 120-something-page tome about federal labor law that includes a lot of – I can go into detail on that decision, but I'll say a few things.
It displayed a really flawed view of collective bargaining that was tilted in favor of unions.
is a misunderstanding of the role of the president in dealing with unions and with his own workforce.
It assumes that the health of the unions derives from getting free stuff from the government.
And even worse, she saw in that 120-page document real value in unions being politically active, lobbying, for instance, on behalf of federal employees.
at the same time they're sitting across the bargaining table from the very people that they're lobbying.
So she's also got a philosophy that I think came out, but those are the profound flaws that, in my view, attracted the attention of the labor unions, put her on the map and then made her the favored candidate.
Now, later on, she would go on to become a judge on the D.C. Circuit, court, and she wrote two opinions at the D.C. Circuit.
one of them dealt with federal sector labor law and happened to evolve one of the same parties that had filed the suit initially.
Her profound misunderstanding was just repeated in that case on a broader scale.
And I can go into detail on that one if you're interested.
I guess what I'm curious about is was her 100-page opinion out of the ordinary?
Was that sort of large, profound amount of text regarding a case all that out of the ordinary?
was this just a very complicated case that she needed to do that?
It was a complicated case, no doubt.
And I mentioned 17 federal sector unions involved in the thing, three executive orders
that were varying levels of complexity.
But on the other hand, I think the style of writing that she employed in the length, the breadth
of things that she took on in that document, it was sort of like a showcase for the unions.
It put her on the map and made her a viable candidate.
Okay.
So I think before we get a little too deep into the weeds here, one of the concepts that you've mentioned a little bit is collective bargaining and these ideas that unions have this right to do that.
What is that? What is collective bargaining?
Okay. Let's start here. Federal employees, let's talk about that process, federal employees have been unionized since I mentioned since Kennedy back in the 60s.
At that time, it was somewhat of a free for all. And this is how unionization started.
in general, but we'll talk just about federal sector.
Sort of a free-for-all.
And starting with Kennedy and then with Nixon, there were all sorts of executive orders
that would sort of allow unions to come in and then tell them what they could and couldn't bargain over,
how the agencies were going to approach them.
But that really became a statutory process when Congress got involved.
They passed a couple of different federal sector labor laws that would formalize this process,
codify it.
And I think in general that was probably a good move.
It took what could have been just another one of these things that swings back and forth with presidents into something a little bit more stable.
Now I'll tell you, that's become unward somewhat, and this thing also goes back and forth these days.
But it was probably a good move.
And what it asked the federal government to do is to balance two things.
One, the right of federal employees to organize with the right of the government, the need for the government to run an effective and a fair and efficient.
Business.
Right, right.
And in my role, President Trump appointed me to a panel called the Federal Service Impasses panel.
One of the mechanisms that was created in these statutes to deal with the inevitable conflict that would happen between agencies and unions.
Now, what Kintaghi Brown Jackson thinks about this process is that the contest between an agency and a union is sort of like a football.
game. And you can imagine that the conflict that goes on between these two sides would somehow
produce the best result. That's what she thinks. Now, in fact, what we've seen over time,
it's been decades now, what we've seen over time is that labor law has been tilted in favor
of unions. So that, for instance, when an employer and a union go to arbitration, an arbitrator
more or less splits the baby. And by splitting the baby, they've only encouraged the union.
union to ask for more because at the very least the union's going to get about half of what it asked
for.
So unions sit across the bargaining table and make these outrageous demands.
Okay, so stop there.
One big difference between private sector labor and public sector labor is that when unions are
sitting across this bargaining table and making these outrageous demands, in the private
sector, they're making those demands of an employer who's trying to run.
of business. And if they go out of business or have to move overseas, all of the employees are
out of their jobs. And then the private sector union leaders have really messed up. In the public
sector, on the other hand, these public sector union officials are sitting across from a government
that never goes out of business. It never goes out of business. There's always more to extract.
Not only that, but they've also got this incentive to do rent seeking to get involved,
politically so that the people sitting across the bargaining table owe the unions some sort of
payoff.
So they do it all the time.
Think at the lowest level, a school district where school boards run for office,
teachers unions are very, very involved in the school board campaigns.
And if they can get the school board that they want on the other side of the bargaining table,
then they will get all of those outrageous demands without even having to go to arbitration.
So public sector labor law can be fundamentally broken depending on how one administers it.
FDR thought that public sector unionization, for instance, was just out of the question,
that it was fundamentally different from private sector labor law.
Well, Kintaghi Brown Jackson, I told you, sort of sees this thing as a football field.
She actually appears to, from her writings, appears to view that football game as one in which the referees should continue to get involved until there's a tie ball game or until the unions win.
She seems to think that it's intolerable that the government, in this case the employer, could somehow work among different agencies, get a better coach, whatever it is, and then end up winning that ball game.
And unfortunately, that means that we don't really get the result that we wanted at the end of the ballgame.
We get a tie.
Right, right.
And so we're not looking for a tie.
We're looking for something else.
We're looking for a better result that doesn't result in both parties kind of splitting it, right?
Well, listen, that balancing act that Congress asked the federal government to engage in.
Remember, the right of employees to organize versus the ability for the government to run an efficient and a fair government,
then sometimes that results in an imbalance.
And it depends a little bit, it should depend on the facts on the ground.
So when people go to, if employees are properly represented,
hopefully they're going to have a manager who respects them and gives them the value that they should get as employees,
unless there's no value.
And then the employer might should have the flexibility to either pay them less,
to ask bad employees to leave.
And Kintaghi Brown Jackson, in that opinion, made it very clear that she wants the government to have no such flexibility.
So then one of the consequences if Katanji Brown Jackson is confirmed to the court.
It seems like she would have a lot more power and influence on the Supreme Court than she would on the D.C.
Circuit.
Oh, yeah.
And so I've read a lot of stuff that says the ideological balance of the court is not going to change.
And that's because, you know, people think that there's a 6-3 split.
and then she's basically taking the place of a judge for whom she clerked Breyer.
Byron, Whizzer White, the football player turned Supreme Court Justice, said that every time a new Supreme Court justice gets on the court, the court changes.
And I think that's what we're going to see.
In my view, it appears that Justice Alito had some particular views with respect to public sector unionization that ended up getting worked out through a series of decisions, starting in terms.
starting in 2012 and ending in 2018 with a case called Janice versus AFSCME.
I think he drove the court on that because he understood the First Amendment, not for a nefarious reason, but because he had a particular judicial philosophy.
Even taking Kintashi Brown Jackson at her best, she's got new judicial philosophies.
She's got her own view on the First Amendment and how it should work.
She's definitely got her own perspective on how federal sector bargaining should work.
And she's going to bring that to the court.
and she may drive some of these issues.
I think unions are getting what they're paying for.
So you think that even though, you know, as we've mentioned, there is an ideological difference on the court that would make it more difficult for sort of sweeping liberal positions to get past, there will still be an impact by her nature on the court.
Oh, absolutely.
You don't know what happens behind those closed door steering conference, but it certainly looks like a judge has room within that context to drive towards certain things that they believe.
should be reflected in the majority decisions.
Okay.
You mentioned earlier that you served as a presidential appointee to the federal service impasses panel during the Trump administration.
What were some of the things that you handled while you were in that position?
The impetus panel is supposed to resolve conflicts when they've reached an impasse.
So when you've got this bargaining thing happening, unions are sitting across the bargaining table from the agency,
there are going to be some sticking points and neither side wants to move.
It's called an impasse.
Historically, that's been a very bad result from collective bargaining.
You may remember when President Reagan had to stand up to the air traffic controllers.
The air traffic controllers decided they were going to go on strike.
And he said, we're going to have to move on without you.
This panel, I think it's fair to say that this panel was designed so that we don't have to get into that situation again.
So that this panel has extraordinary authority to help people reach impasse,
to sit down with the parties, and then if all else fails to actually impose written terms and
conditions on the parties so that they can move forward with their lives.
And we think that maybe if Katanji Brown Jackson were to be confirmed to the Supreme Court,
we would see less of an impact from that because in her mind you wouldn't need that
because it's always the fault of the government.
It's never the fault of the public sector union.
Yeah, that's an interesting question.
I don't know that I've thought too hard about what decisions might, how those
decisions might affect indirectly the Federal Service Impassas panel. The decision I told you about,
the 120 page thing, I was particularly clued into that because it had everything to do with the
work at the Federal Service Impassas panel. But her decision at the D.C. Circuit Court might be a
better example. There she held that, along with a panel of judges, that the government had to
engage in collective bargaining whenever there's more of a de minimis impact on terms and
conditions of employment for employees. So here's a couple of examples. An employee
gets moved from his window seat to another part of the office. Her decision and the de minimis
standard would require that the union and the employer sit down, require that they sit down
and negotiate that move. Highly inefficient. The FLRA, which is sort of like the NLRB for federal
employees tried to make a change in this, and she stopped them from doing that.
That would mean that there's a lot more bargaining over very small issues and a lot more
opportunity, unfortunately, to reach impasse.
So I could see the Federal Service impasse's panel actually being flooded with new requests
for help, you know, breaching, figuring out how to get past this impasse.
Interesting.
As we wrap up, I'm curious if, as we're watching these confirmation hearings on TV and
is we're sort of pondering whether or not she's going to be a very pro-union justice
on the court.
Can ordinary Americans actually do anything to sort of mitigate the worst consequences
of a potential confirmation to the Supreme Court?
My organization cares a lot about people.
So Americans for Fair Treatment educates public employees as to their First Amendment rights
in particular.
And it also empowers them to act in response and in defense of those rights.
So if you are a federal employee, you can decide today to stop paying union dues.
You can leave your union, withdraw your membership.
We have tools to help you do that.
If you want more rights within your workplace and you're dissatisfied with your union, we've helped public employees exercise their constitutional and statutory rights to replace your union or to create a new local only union instead.
And these, if you're not a public employee and you're sort of on the outside, your awareness of these issues when you're voting, when you're paying your taxes makes all the difference in the world.
What very few people realize is how powerful these unions are from the bottom all the way to the top, the stuff that we've been talking about today.
Excellent.
That was David Osborne, CEO of Americans for Fair Treatment, a national nonprofit that works to educate public science.
or employees about their constitutional rights around union membership.
David, very much appreciate your time.
Yeah, thanks, Doug.
And that'll do it for today's episode.
Thanks so much for listening to The Daily Signal podcast.
You can find the Daily Signal podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Play, IHeartRadio.
Please be sure to leave us a review and a five-star rating on Apple Podcasts.
And please subscribe and encourage others to do so.
Thanks again for listening.
I'll be back with you all tomorrow.
The Daily Signal podcast is brought to you by more than half a million members of the Heritage Foundation.
It is executive produced by Virginia Allen and Kate Trinko, sound designed by Lauren Evans, Mark Geinney, and John Pop.
For more information, please visit DailySignal.com.
