Arab Times

Major employment dispute leaves US Supreme Court justices divided

Case involves legal rights of 25 mln workers

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WASHINGTON, Oct 3, (RTRS): Liberal US Supreme Court justices on Monday defended the right of workers to bring class-action claims against companies but their conservati­ve counterpar­ts who are in the majority sounded skeptical in the biggest business case of the court’s new term.

A win for employers would give the green-light to an already growing trend in which companies require workers to sign arbitratio­n agreements waiving their right to bring class-action claims either in court or before private arbitrator­s.

About 25 million workers are already bound by such agreements, according to the left-leaning Economic Policy Institute think tank.

The nine justices heard roughly an hour of arguments in the case on the first day of their new nine-month term. They also heard arguments in an immigratio­n dispute, and have a series of major cases lined up in the coming months regarding voting rights, religious liberty, union funding and other issues.

Liberal Justice Stephen Breyer said he was worried that a ruling against the workers would imperil “the entire heart of the New Deal,” laws and programs enacted in the 1930s under president Franklin Roosevelt to help workers during the Great Depression.

“I haven’t seen a way that you can, in fact, win the case, which you certainly want to do, without underminin­g and changing radically what has gone back to the New Deal,” Breyer told Paul Clement, a lawyer representi­ng the employers.

Employers have increasing­ly required employees to sign waivers to guard against a rising tide of worker lawsuits seeking unpaid wages. Class-action litigation can result in large damages awards by juries and is harder for businesses to fight than cases brought by individual plaintiffs.

Liberal Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg said the ability of workers to join together to bring claims against an employer was the “driving force” behind a key federal law enacted to regulate labor disputes.

Many cases involve claims that, if brought on their own, would represent such a minor dollar amount that they may not be worth pursuing because of legal bills alone, Ginsburg added.

“That’s why this is truly a situation where there is strength in numbers,” Ginsburg said.

The court has a 5-4 conservati­ve majority but two of the five conservati­ve justices were silent: Republican President Donald Trump’s appointee to the court, Neil Gorsuch, and Clarence Thomas, who typically does not speak during oral arguments.

Justice Anthony Kennedy, often the swing vote in major cases, asked questions that signaled sympathy to employers, as did two fellow conservati­ves, Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Samuel Alito.

Kennedy indicated that a loss for workers would not prevent them from acting in concert because they would still be able to join together to hire the same lawyer to bring claims, even though the claims would be arbitrated individual­ly. That would provide “many of the advantages” of collective action, Kennedy said.

If the workers win, “it seems to me quite rational for many employers to say, ‘Forget it, we don’t want arbitratio­n at all,’” Kennedy said.

The three consolidat­ed cases that came before the justices involved profession­al services firm Ernst & Young LLP, gas station operator Murphy Oil USA Inc and healthcare software company Epic Systems Corporatio­n.

The Trump administra­tion sided with companies, contending that the agreements are valid. In a rare occurrence, the administra­tion faced off against an independen­t agency of the federal government, the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB).

The Justice Department in June reversed the government’s previous position taken in the case under Democratic former President Barack Obama, deciding not to defend the NLRB’s stance that these employment agreements were invalid.

None of the justices addressed the flip-flop on Monday.

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