The U.S. Supreme Court shut the door Monday on a challenge to a Fifth Circuit ruling that enables the National Labor Relations Board's targets to get its cases blocked, turning away a union's appeal of a decision refusing to let it join the case.
President Donald Trump's choice to bolster the Republican Party's majority on the National Labor Relations Board is an atypical pick with relatively little experience before the agency, but the board's infrastructure should smooth his learning curve, experts told Law360.
Amazon and a Teamsters affiliate must present to the Fifth Circuit their competing challenges to a National Labor Relations Board decision requiring the e-commerce giant to bargain with the union, the Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation ruled.
Previous
Next
The U.S. Supreme Court shut the door Monday on a challenge to a Fifth Circuit ruling that enables the National Labor Relations Board's targets to get its cases blocked, turning away a union's appeal of a decision refusing to let it join the case.
President Donald Trump's choice to bolster the Republican Party's majority on the National Labor Relations Board is an atypical pick with relatively little experience before the agency, but the board's infrastructure should smooth his learning curve, experts told Law360.
Amazon and a Teamsters affiliate must present to the Fifth Circuit their competing challenges to a National Labor Relations Board decision requiring the e-commerce giant to bargain with the union, the Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation ruled.
-
April 20, 2026
A group of employees of a Buffalo, New York-area hospital network can't prove their employer violated federal benefits law when it switched them from a pension plan to a cash-balance plan in the late 1990s, the company argued, asking a federal judge to toss the suit.
-
April 20, 2026
The International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers has asked a Colorado federal judge to affirm an arbitrator's finding that DirecTV's layoffs of union-represented technicians violated a collective bargaining agreement between the two entities.
-
April 20, 2026
A coalition of nonprofits, university professors, federal contractors and subcontractors are seeking to block an executive order requiring government contractors to agree they won't engage in "racially discriminatory DEI activities," telling a Maryland federal court Monday that the directive will cause "irreparable harm" to the groups and their members.
-
April 20, 2026
The House could soon consider a Teamsters-backed bill that aims to speed up negotiations on initial labor contracts, after the New Jersey Democrat sponsoring the measure filed a petition Monday seeking to force a vote.
-
April 20, 2026
President Donald Trump's labor secretary stepped down on Monday amid fallout from an internal investigation by the U.S. Department of Labor watchdog that apparently probed a relationship she allegedly had with a subordinate, and other issues.
-
April 20, 2026
An AT&T Inc. retailer is fighting a National Labor Relations Board order that invalidated a portion of its severance agreement, telling the Fifth Circuit that the board relied on a Biden-era policy on severance agreements that should be overturned.
-
April 20, 2026
The Trump administration has asked the First Circuit to uphold a decision rejecting a labor coalition's challenge to its deferred-resignation program for federal workers, arguing the coalition's bid to revive the claims falls flat.
-
April 20, 2026
Uber failed to provide drivers with a process for challenging deactivations under California's Proposition 22, which provided certain benefits for app-based drivers and exempted them from an independent contractor classification law, a ride-hailing driver advocacy group alleged Monday in state court.
-
April 20, 2026
A group of Wilmington police captains who say they were denied overtime pay for years asked a Delaware federal judge on Monday to rule in their favor without a trial, arguing undisputed evidence shows they are frontline officers entitled to overtime under federal law.
-
April 20, 2026
The U.S. Supreme Court turned down a baked goods company's bid for review of the Eleventh Circuit's finding that it owed a union pension fund up to $15.6 million, leaving in place Monday a ruling that backed the union's interpretation of pension withdrawal liability law.
-
April 17, 2026
The Fifth Circuit on Friday vacated a National Labor Relations Board order that dinged Starbucks for sending overbroad subpoenas to pro-union employees, saying in a published opinion that the board applied the wrong legal standard for determining whether the coffeehouse chain committed an unfair labor practice.
-
April 17, 2026
The National Labor Relations Board is pursuing an "unconstitutional administrative proceeding" against Volkswagen's U.S. arm, the automaker told a Texas federal court Friday, saying the NLRB is attempting to force it to recognize and bargain with a union that employees at an essential supply chain facility voted against.
-
April 17, 2026
Red Roof Inn violated federal labor law by firing a worker shortly after she raised concerns about COVID-19 exposure in the workplace, the National Labor Relations Board ruled Friday, upholding an administrative law judge's 2022 decision against the hotel chain.
-
April 17, 2026
A federal appeals court is on track to weigh in on whether Google must bargain with a content creators' union, but whether that court will be the Ninth Circuit or the D.C. Circuit is still an open question.
-
April 17, 2026
Starbucks has filed an unfair labor practice charge against Workers United, accusing the union of refusing to bargain and pushing a "false narrative" that the company had to be forced to resume bargaining.
-
April 17, 2026
New lawsuits and a tricky compliance landscape have besieged a trucking industry navigating the Trump administration's aggressive enforcement of restrictions on immigrant commercial truck drivers, as motor carriers, freight brokers and other ground-based shippers worry about escalating rates, driver turnover and service disruptions.
-
April 17, 2026
A New Jersey state appeals court on Friday upheld a state labor agency's finding that dozens of employees at three public colleges are eligible for union membership, rejecting the state's argument that the workers fall within a statutory carveout for managers.
-
April 17, 2026
An International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers local must expand voting in a representation election for employees at an ATM installation company to include additional workers in a territory spanning several states in the Northeast, a National Labor Relations Board official ruled.
-
April 17, 2026
A split National Labor Relations Board has backed a board official's decision ordering a redo of a union representation election at a Kansas bacon production plant, finding that a United Food and Commercial Workers Union local failed to raise any substantial issues that warranted revisiting the ruling.
-
April 17, 2026
In the next week, attorneys should keep an eye out for Ninth Circuit oral arguments in a discrimination case against Tesla Inc. Here's a look at that case and other labor and employment matters coming up in California.
-
April 17, 2026
In the week ahead, a federal judge will consider New York City's request to dismiss Uber and DoorDash's challenge to a pair of city laws that regulate how food delivery platforms display tipping options.
-
April 16, 2026
The National Labor Relations Board's decision to drop a case against SpaceX smacks of corruption given company founder Elon Musk's close ties to President Donald Trump, two Democratic senators told the board's general counsel in a letter.
-
April 16, 2026
The Sixth Circuit on Thursday asked participants in Kellogg and FedEx pension plans to respond to the companies' bids for reconsideration of the court's decision to revive their lawsuits alleging benefits were miscalculated because the plans used outdated mortality data.
-
April 16, 2026
A coalition of federal worker unions is seeking to halt a final rule altering the Federal Labor Relations Authority's process for handling union representation cases, filing a complaint in Massachusetts federal court claiming that the delegation of power to the authority's members violates the law.
-
April 16, 2026
The government has upended discovery rules by blanketly shielding records of cuts at the Federal Emergency Management Agency from public view, a labor-led coalition challenging the cuts told a California federal judge.