Corporate Accountability

RELEASE: At the Supreme Court, Starbucks’s Arguments Run Headlong into the History of American Labor Law

WASHINGTON, DC – Following oral argument at the Supreme Court this morning in Starbucks v. McKinney, a case in which the Court is considering what standard courts should apply when deciding whether to grant a National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) request for a temporary injunction to halt an alleged unfair labor practice, Constitutional Accountability Center Appellate Counsel Smita Ghosh issued the following reaction:

At the Supreme Court this morning, Starbucks engaged in a battle that is part of its larger war against the campaign to unionize its coffee houses, arguing that courts cannot defer to the NLRB in considering NLRB requests to enjoin alleged unfair labor practices.

Starbucks argues that courts must adhere to so-called traditional equitable practices that, in their view, preclude consideration of statutory context and deference to the NLRB. This argument runs headlong into both the history of American labor law and traditional equitable principles, which recognize that the “public interest” and statutory context are always important considerations.

As Justice Jackson noted at the start of the argument, this is not a “standard preliminary injunction,” because the statute at issue here reflects Congress’s decades-long effort to limit the jurisdiction of courts over labor disputes and give the NLRB the ultimate authority to resolve disputes between unions and employers. Moreover, several justices pointed out that no matter the test at issue, consideration of the statutory context is appropriate. Here, statutory context requires some degree of deference to the Board’s judgments.

While today’s argument left unclear what the justices will do, if they adhere to the text and history of the law at issue, as well as Supreme Court precedent, they should reject Starbucks’s argument.

##

Resources:

Case page in Starbucks v. McKinney: https://www.theusconstitution.org/litigation/starbucks-corp-v-mckinney/

##

More from Corporate Accountability

Corporate Accountability
July 2, 2024

QUICK TAKE: Corporate Interests at the Supreme Court, 2023-2024 Term

Conservative supermajority discards precedent, shifts power to judges, and hobbles agency efforts to enforce the...
By: Brian R. Frazelle
Corporate Accountability
June 24, 2024

The Supreme Court’s War on Working People Just Got a Little Worse

Balls and Strikes
The decision in Starbucks Corporation v. McKinney is part of a long tradition of the Supreme Court...
Corporate Accountability
 

Intuit, Inc. v. Federal Trade Commission

In Intuit Inc v. Federal Trade Commission, the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit is considering whether the FTC’s authority to issue cease-and-desist orders against false and misleading advertising is constitutional.
Corporate Accountability
June 20, 2024

RELEASE: In narrow ruling, Supreme Court rejects baseless effort to shield corporate-derived income from taxation

WASHINGTON, DC – Following this morning’s decision at the Supreme Court in Moore v. United...
By: Brian R. Frazelle
Corporate Accountability
June 13, 2024

RELEASE: Supreme Court’s Disappointing Decision in Starbucks Union Case Fails to Account for History

WASHINGTON, DC – Following today’s decision at the Supreme Court in Starbucks Corp. v. McKinney,...
By: Smita Ghosh
Corporate Accountability
May 30, 2024

Supreme Court gives New Yorkers second shot in escrow interest-payment fight

Courthouse News Service
WASHINGTON (CN) — The Supreme Court on Thursday gave New York homeowners another shot at...
By: Smita Ghosh, Kelsey Reichmann