Austin American-Statesman

Obama’s pro-labor moves are unfair to job creators

- Hector Barreto He is the former administra­tor of the Small Business Administra­tion.

Anti-business policies have unfortunat­ely become the norm for the Obama administra­tion. From the Affordable Care Act to Dodd-Frank, the past six years have been hard for job creators across the United States, even as they strive to hire new workers and lift an anemic economic recovery.

Anti-competitiv­e regulation­s have taken center stage in recent days with the implementa­tion of a new rule by President Barack Obama’s National Labor Relations Board. The aptly named “ambush” election ruling, which came into effect on April 14, allows labor bosses to call organizing elections in as few as 13 days — down from the previous average of 38 days.

This policy change has no practical explanatio­n, other than it is repayment to union bosses who spent $1 billion to help elect and re-elect Obama.

As union membership has declined in recent years, Obama has stacked the NLRB with Big Labor cronies who have continuall­y enacted policies that make it significan­tly harder for employers. The “ambush” election ruling is just the latest iteration of an anti-business agenda enacted at the behest of union bosses.

According to the NLRB’s own data, the shorter the election time, the more likely it will be for a shop to approve unionizati­on.

Between 2004 and 2014, labor bosses were successful in 60 percent of elections that occurred within 36 to 42 days. However, when elections were held in under 21 days, they were victorious an incredible 86 percent of the time. Moving up election times disproport­ionately tips the scales — exactly what Big Labor and the Obama administra­tion intend.

While this policy is bad for all employers, small businesses would be acutely affected. These companies, which account for nearly 50 percent of private-sector employment, often operate on razor-thin margins.

Under the “ambush” election rule, union bosses will be able to lay the groundwork for months to prime workplaces for elections. Unfortunat­ely, smaller companies often do not have in-house lawyers and will not have adequate time to obtain counsel to ensure they are complying with all laws.

Additional­ly, under the new “ambush” rules, union organizers can approach any worker for their support, but voter eligibilit­y will not be determined until after the election. This is a stark change from tradition, which allowed workers ample time to secure informatio­n prior to the election.

Worse, employers’ automatic post-election NLRB review will now be eliminated, replaced by discretion­ary reviews. It is clear that the Obama Labor Board has done everything it can to ensure union bosses are significan­tly better off.

Earlier this year, pro-business members of both the U.S. House and Senate passed a bill that would have overruled the NLRB on the “ambush” ruling. Predictabl­y, Obama vetoed the bill — making it only the fourth piece of legislatio­n that he has rejected. Despite famously calling for a new way of doing business in Washington, Obama continues to show an unwavering proclivity for helping Big Labor at the expense of American small-business owners.

These policies are seriously hurting the very backbone of our economy. And they must be stopped.

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