USA TODAY International Edition
WHEN POLITICS & YOUR JOB COLLIDE
What employees do outside of work isn’t guaranteed protection
“There’s no federal law that broadly protects employees’ political expressions at work.’’
Emily Martin, general counsel, National Women’s Law Center
Should your politics outside of work affect your status in the office?
A congressman’s letter that helped push a New Jersey attorney to resign after her boss was told she was a grass- roots “ringleader’’ has sparked questions about how much an employer can clamp down on an employee’s activism.
The Office of Congressional Ethics has been asked to investigate whether U. S. Rep. Rodney Frelinghuysen, R- N. J., interfered with the workplace standing of Saily Avelenda, a former senior vice president at Lakeland Bank, when he called out her political activities in a letter to a member of the bank’s board.
In an era of heightened political tensions, when football players have knelt in protest during the national anthem and many Americans are marching and boycotting for perhaps the first time, the case is showing how politics and the workplace can collide.
“There’s no federal law that broadly protects employees’ political expressions at work,’’ says Emily Martin, general counsel and vice president for workplace justice at the National Women’s Law Center.
While she says some states offer additional protections, and federal civil servants can’t be discriminated against based on political beliefs, “private employers have a lot of leeway.’’
Still, in practice, while some employers may put limits on overt political activities in the office, like tacking a campaign poster to a cubicle wall, what employees do politically in their private lives generally is off limits, says Edward Yost of the Society for Human Resource Management.
“If they’re marching on the weekends, on one side or the other, those are their rights to do so,’’ he says.
Avelenda was involved with a local grass- roots organization, NJ11th For Change, which since November has been demanding that Frelinghuysen hold an inperson town hall with his constituents, something he has not done since 2013.
In March, the congressman sent a signed fundraising letter to a Lakeland Bank board member, Joseph O’Dowd, noting the opposition he was facing. He
also tacked on a handwritten note that read, “P. S. One of the ringleaders works in your bank!’’ Attached was a Politico article quoting Avelenda.
Avelenda was later shown the letter by her boss, who told her Frelinghuysen was a friend of the bank and that she should not use Lakeland’s name when engaging in political activities, which she says she had not done. Avelenda eventually quit, and while she says the letter was not the only reason, it was a factor.
“When I was shown the letter, I was stunned,’’ Avelenda said. “I didn’t feel pressured when I was told of the letter. I understood they were caught in the middle of this, but I did feel uncomfortable. I wondered why I was being scrutinized.”
Lakeland said in a statement it does not comment on the status of current or former staff members. But it says its code of ethics promotes “that each employee has the opportunity to support community activities or the political process in the manner that she or he desires.’’
There could be repercussions for the congressman. The Campaign for Accountability, which calls itself a non- partisan, watchdog organization, filed a complaint with the Office of Congressional Ethics against Frelinghuysen.
“The House ethics committee requires members to act in a way that ‘ reflects creditably on the House,’ ” Campaign for Accountability Executive Director Daniel Stevens said. “If trying to get someone fired for exercising her constitutional right to engage in political activity doesn’t reflect poorly on the House, what does?”
The complaint asks the Office of Congressional Ethics to investigate whether Frelinghuysen interfered with Avelenda’s standing at her workplace, whether he misused his office for the prospect of political gain and whether he violated the rule requiring members to act in a manner that reflects creditably on the House of Representatives.
And the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, which works to get Democrats elected in the House of Representatives, condemned Frelinghuysen’s actions. The committee launched a digital ad campaign on Facebook and Instagram on Tuesday, targeting voters in Frelinghuysen’s congressional district and using a quote from Avelenda, saying Frelinghuysen used his position to punish her.
“Rep. Frelinghuysen abused the power of his office when he targeted his constituent for exercising her First Amendment rights,” committee spokesman Evan Lukaske said. “His unethical actions represent the very worst kind of politics and show exactly why he needs to be replaced next November.”
Frelinghuysen did not respond to repeated calls and emails.
Few workplaces have an official policy governing political activities on the job, though many discourage it, according to the Society for Human Resource Management.
A SHRM survey released in June, in the midst of the presidential contest between Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton, found 72% of human resource professionals said their companies discouraged political activities on the job, 24% had a formal, written policy regarding activism and 8% had an unwritten policy.