Symposium: Four propositions that follow from Janus
on Jun 28, 2018 at 2:36 pm
James Coppess is the associate general counsel for the American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations, which filed an amicus brief in support of the union in Janus v. AFSCME.
In Abood v. Detroit Board of Education, the Supreme Court in 1977 held that the First Amendment allows public employers to require that their employees pay a service fee to their collective-bargaining representative covering the costs of contract negotiation and enforcement. At the same time, the court also held that the First Amendment does not allow requiring such employees to financially support costs unrelated to collective bargaining. With respect to core collective bargaining over economic terms of employment, the court was unanimous. Even Justice Lewis Powell, who wrote separately, agreed that âthe case for requiring all teachers to contribute to the clearly identified costs of collective bargainingâ â over matters such as âteachersâ salaries and pension benefitsâ â âwould be strong.â
Over four decades, Abood was treated by the Supreme Court as a foundational First Amendment precedent. This was true not only with respect to the First Amendment rights of public employees, as to which the court issued numerous decisions carefully explicating how the holding of Abood should be applied, but also with respect to an entire line of âcompelled-subsidy casesâ stretching far beyond the realm of labor relations in which, as Justice Anthony Kennedy put it in 2000 in Board of Regents v. Southworth, âAbood provided the foundation for our later decision[s]â and âthe beginning point for our analysis.â In the numerous decisions applying Abood in a wide variety of non-labor contexts, not a single justice expressed the slightest doubt that, as Justice David Souter put it in a 1997 dissent in Glickman v. Wileman Bros. & Elliott, Inc., Â âa proper understanding of Abood is necessary for the disposition of [any] caseâ involving âcompelled contributions.â
The first doubts about Abood were expressed by Justice Samuel Alito in 2012 in Knox v. Service Employees. Two years later, in Harris v. Quinn, his criticism became much more strident. And, finally, at the end of this term, Alito authored the 5-4 decision in Janus v. American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees, overruling Abood. As Justice Elena Kagan ably demonstrates in her dissenting opinion, the decision to overrule Abood cannot be defended in terms of First Amendment analysis. Rather, it is nothing more than a political decision that âprevents the American people, acting through their state and local officials, from making important choices about workplace governance.â
There is no point in repeating Kaganâs criticisms of the majority opinion in Janus. However, it might be worth noting several propositions that should follow from it.
First, under the Janus majority opinion, a public employerâs ârestrictions on what can be saidâ by public employees, just like âthe compelled subsidization of private speechâ at issue there, should be subject to âexacting scrutinyâ requiring that the restrictions âserve a compelling state interest that cannot be achieved through means significantly less restrictive.â Previously, the court had held in 1983 in Connick v. Myers that the âlimited First Amendment interest involvedâ in workplace-related speech by public employees permitted any restriction on speech that the employer âreasonably believedâ might have utility.
Second, although the matter has not been in any doubt since 1984âs Minnesota Board for Community Colleges v. Knight, Janus confirms that the First Amendment is not violated by collective bargaining through an exclusive employee representative. Many pages of the Janus opinion are spent in an attempt to show it is âsimply not trueâ that âdesignation of a union as the exclusive representative of all employees in a unit and the exaction of agency fees are inextricably linked.â That would hardly have been relevant if the designation itself were unconstitutional.
Third, the Janus opinion severely criticizes Aboodâs âfail[ure] to appreciate that a very different First Amendment question arises when a State requires its employees to pay agency feesâ than arises from âCongressâs âbare authorizationâ of private-sector union shops under the Railway Labor Act.â In this regard, Janus says it is âquestionableâ whether âany First Amendment issue could have properly arisenâ from âCongressâs enactment of a provision allowing, but not requiring, private parties to enter into union-shop arrangements.â This calls into question myriad lower-court and National Labor Relations Board decisions drawing on First Amendment precedents in defining the statutory duty of unions with respect to charging mandatory service fees under private sector agreements.
Finally, the Janus majority opinion indicates that requiring lawyers to pay bar association fees as a condition of practicing law is unconstitutional. As Kagan notes repeatedly in her dissent, without any denial by Alito, the court had relied upon Abood to âbless[] the constitutionalityâ of âmandatory fees imposed on state bar members.â Indeed, the courtâs lead decision establishing the constitutionality of mandatory bar fees, 1961âs Lathrop v. Donohue, treats the issue as having been settled in 1956 by Railway Employesâ Dept. v. Hanson, the same Railway Labor Act precedent that Janus criticizes Abood for following. If Abood âwent wrongâ relying on Hanson, then so did Lathrop. And it follows that the Supreme Court compounded its error in 1990 with Keller v. State Bar of California by relying entirely on Abood in setting the constitutional limits on mandatory bar fees.