Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

The Supreme Court Just Made It A Lot Easier For Companies To Evade Lawsuits By Employees

The Supreme Court Just Made It A Lot Easier For Companies To Evade Lawsuits By Employees
Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

The United States Supreme Court issued a ruling on Monday that greatly undermines the ability of workers to sue their employers for withholding pay or exercising discriminatory practices.


In a 5-4 ruling along party lines, the Court sided with employers who force employees to sign arbitration waivers, which eliminate the right for workers to mount class action lawsuits against companies for back pay and discriminatory damages. The ruling upholds existing workplace contracts which state that any disputes must be settled by private arbitrators.

Justice Neil Gorsuch, whom President Donald Trump appointed last year, wrote the deciding opinion, in which he said that National Labor Relations Act was not put in place to "displace" federal arbitration law.

"The policy may be debatable but the law is clear: Congress has instructed that arbitration agreements like those before us must be enforced as written."

Gorsuch's controversial appointment to the Supreme Court came after Senate Republicans blocked President Obama's effort in 2016 to nominate Merrick Garland after the unexpected death of conservative Justice Antonin Scalia. Republicans claimed that because it was an election year, any SCOTUS pick should be put on hold until after the American people had made their choice for president.

Workers challenged employers' enforcement of strict arbitration clauses in employment contracts, arguing before the Supreme Court that the NLRA guarantees workers "mutual aid and protection" in confronting employers over workplace abuses.

Liberal Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg dissented, blasting the majority ruling as "egregiously wrong." Ginsburg argued that the NLRA exists to protect the rights of workers to collectively pursue litigation, which is enormously more difficult and financially burdensome for those who are forced to go it alone.

"Employees' rights to band together to meet their employers' superior strength would be worth precious little if employers could condition employment on workers signing away those rights."

When the case, National Labor Relations Board v. Murphy Oil USA, Inc., was brought before SCOTUS last year, Ginsburg said, "there is strength in numbers," and that it's the Court's duty to "protect the individual worker from being in a situation where he can't protect his rights."

Sheila Hobson, a former Murphy Oil employee, sued the company over overtime work that she claimed herself and coworkers were forced to perform without compensation. After they banded together to launch a class action suit against Murphy Oil, their lawyer informed them that they had rescinded their right to sue when they signed their employment contracts, which included arbitration waivers.

Both The National Labor Relations Board and the Obama administration supported the plaintiffs' claims. The Obama White House even submitted a brief to the Supreme Court, urging the justices to side with workers. Officials within the Trump administration, however, sided with employers, in (as what would be considered then) a rare demonstration of policy reversal from a previous administration.

Last year, the Economic Policy Institute issued a report in which it stated that upwards of 25 million workers in the United States sign away their right to take their employer to court for withholding pay and other discriminatory practices. The EPI's report expressed concern that arbitration waivers would be "even more widespread practice" if the Supreme Court were to side against the collective bargaining power of laborers.

"Class-action lawsuits are often the most powerful way for employees to secure back pay when their minimum wage or overtime rights have been violated or to secure damages when their bosses run afoul of discrimination laws."

Employees now have little recourse in combating wage theft and instances of sexual harassment in the workplace. With the Court's ruling in place, American workers can likely expect abusive practices by employers to not only become more common, but that such misdoings will continue to go unchecked.

More from News

Azealia Banks; Donald Trump
Frazer Harrison/Getty Images; Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images

MAGA Rapper Azealia Banks Admits Trump's Presidency Is An 'Absolute Disaster' In Blunt Tweets

Controversial rapper Azealia Banks has buyer's remorse, making it clear she regrets her vote for President Donald Trump in a series of tweets, describing him as an "absolute disaster" who exhibits "crazy old white man anger."

Banks, who had previously attended a Trump rally and initially declared support for then-Vice President Kamala Harris—citing Elon Musk’s involvement in the Trump campaign as a dealbreaker—ultimately reversed course.

Keep ReadingShow less
ICE agent smashes car window
Marilu Domingo Ortiz via Ondine Galvez-Sniffin

ICE Agent Smashes Immigrant's Car Window While He Waits For Lawyer In Harrowing Video

A Guatemalan family—in the United States under legal asylum status—is seeking answers from the Trump administration's Department of Homeland Security (DHS) after a violent interaction with Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).

On Monday, ICE agents pulled over a Toyota driven by Juan Francisco Méndez, 29, as he and his wife, Marilu Domingo Ortiz, traveled to a dental appointment in New Bedford, Massachusetts. The couple called their lawyer, Ondine Galvez-Sniffin, who advised they stay in their vehicle with the windows closed until she could get to them.

Keep ReadingShow less
Close-up shot of a beautiful young woman looking coyly into the camera. She wears a large black and white beach hat.
Photo by Jan Canty on Unsplash

Women Describe The Times A Man Stood Out To Them For A Positive Reason

Guys can be a lot.

I attest to that as one.

Keep ReadingShow less
Donald Trump after assassination attempt
Rebecca Droke/AFP via Getty Images

White House Slammed After Replacing Obama Portrait With Painting Of Trump's Assassination Attempt

The White House is facing heavy criticism after it posted a video on X showing off a new painting of President Donald Trump's assassination attempt last summer—that is now hanging where an official portrait of former President Barack Obama was once displayed.

The portrait of Obama, unveiled in 2022 during former President Joe Biden’s administration, remains on display in the White House but has been relocated. Originally hung near the staircase to the presidential residence on the State Floor, it has been moved to the opposite wall—where a portrait of former President George W. Bush once hung.

Keep ReadingShow less
Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
C-SPAN

RFK Jr. Claims Autistic Children Will Never 'Hold A Job' Or 'Go On A Date' In Bonkers Rant

Once again displaying the incompetence inherent in the administration, Republican President Donald Trump's Secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS) held his first press conference on Monday.

The purpose was for HHS head Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to spout the misinformation, pseudoscience, and conspiracy theories the antivaxxer is known for.

Keep ReadingShow less