The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Nominee Kavanaugh likely to be pro-employer jurist

- By D. Albert Brannen D. Albert “Bert” Brannen is managing partner of the Atlanta office of national labor and employment law firm Fisher Phillips.

As confirmati­on hearings approach for Judge Brett Kavanaugh, picked by President Donald Trump to fill the vacant seat on the Supreme Court bench, Georgia companies may be wondering what they might expect in terms of workplace law cases if he is confirmed by the Senate.

While one is never certain how a Supreme Court justice will vote until he or she is seated and hearing arguments, Kavanaugh will probably join the pro-business bloc of justices and create a strong, impenetrab­le five-justice majority of conservati­ve jurists.

It is also likely Justice Kavanaugh will be kind to Georgia companies, siding with employers in typical workplace law cases. A review of employment law decisions written by Kavanaugh reveals that, in virtually every published opinion, he ruled in favor of the employer.

In one of his earliest decisions, he ruled in favor of the Bureau of Prisons after a worker filed an action alleging that his non-selection for a promotion was the result of racial discrimina­tion in violation of Title VII. The employee argued the employer made its hiring decision based on a factor not expressly listed in the job descriptio­n.

Kavanaugh was not persuaded. His 2007 opinion concludes: “The fact that an employer based its ultimate hiring decision on one or more specific factors encompasse­d within a broader and more general job descriptio­n does not itself raise an inference of discrimina­tion sufficient to overcome summary judgment [a legal process that ends a case without a trial].”

In a 2008 case, Kavanaugh sided with the District of Columbia public school system in a disability discrimina­tion case brought by a hearing-impaired applicant. He concluded the employer’s proffered reason for not hiring the applicant withstood scrutiny.

Later in 2008, Kavanaugh denied a doctoral candidate’s appeal following a jury trial loss in another disability discrimina­tion case. Although that candidate raised several technical issues that might have otherwise warranted a retrial, Kavanaugh sided with the employer and rejected the appeal.

At least twice in his tenure on the D.C. Circuit, Kavanaugh had the opportunit­y to rule in favor of workers in their employment law claims but seemed to go the extra mile to issue a ruling in favor of the employer.

On the other hand, Kavanaugh has proven that he is not afraid to rule in favor of workers in egregious cases. For example, in a 2013 case where an employee alleged he had been called a racial epithet by a supervisor, Kavanaugh had no problem finding that a single verbal incident of such severity could sustain a hostile work environmen­t claim. And in 2016, he agreed that a worker could bring a valid Title VII claim when an employer rejects a lateral transfer applicatio­n for reasons based on race or gender.

During his time on the D.C. bench, Kavanaugh also had ample opportunit­y to weigh in on traditiona­l labor matters. While most of his decisions have fallen in favor of employers, he has also demonstrat­ed an independen­t streak and sided with unions on occasion.

He is also likely to take a hard line on immigratio­n. Soon after joining the bench, he was faced with a case involving whether undocument­ed workers could be considered “employees” who can help to form a union under the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA). Kavanaugh strongly disagreed: “I would hold that an illegal immigrant worker is not an ‘employee’ under the NLRA, for the simple reason that, ever since 1986, an illegal immigrant worker is not a lawful ‘employee’ in the United States.”

In 2014, the D.C. Circuit ruled employers can properly sponsor immigrants for “specialize­d knowledge” visas if those workers have a particular “cultural knowledge.” Kavanaugh also dissented from this decision, writing in the majority opinion: “Mere economic expediency does not authorize an employer to displace American workers for foreign workers.”

Before Georgia companies celebrate, however, Kavanaugh must first get confirmed. If he does, the relatively young jurist (age 53) could easily enjoy 20 to 30 years on the Supreme Court bench, taking part in dozens of cases that shape our workplace laws.

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