CTU can’t sue group for campaigning in union elections

CTU can’t sue group for campaigning in union elections

Spread the love

A federal appeals panel won’t let the Chicago Teachers Union sue a rival group over allegations it campaigned on behalf of CTU members seeking leadership posts.

At issue is the federal Labor Management Reporting and Disclosure Act, a 1959 law that bars a union or an employer from spending money promoting candidates for union office. CTU and member Moselean Parker accused a rival group, Educators 4 Excellence, of violating that law by recruiting and promoting candidates during a May 2022 CTU election cycle.

After U.S. District Judge Edmond Chang dismissed the complaint, CTU took the issue to the U.S. Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals. Judge Michael Brennan wrote the panel’s opinion, filed Nov. 19; Judges Joshua Kolar and Nancy Maldonado concurred, with Maldonado writing a brief special concurrence.

“Educators 4 Excellent is a nonprofit corporation whose goal is to limit the power of teacher unions,” Brennan wrote. “Educators sought out candidates for the election who would attempt to limit the power of teacher unions and their ability to collectively bargain over certain issues.”

The group’s website says its members include 30,000 teachers concerned their voices as educators are “consistently left out of education policy decisions.”

On appeal, CTU and Parker insisted the LMRDA implies the right of private organizations to sue. Brennan noted Educators doesn’t dispute it meets the legal definition of an employer under the law, then began his analysis by examining the history of implied and express rights and acknowledging CTU’s brief “appears not to contest” Judge Chang’s conclusion the law doesn’t specifically grant it the right to sue.

The panel held Congress didn’t intend for the type of legal action CTU and Parker pursued. Most revealing, Brennan said, is the law specifies enforcement remedies.

“For 60 years,” he noted, the U.S. Supreme Court has endorsed a statutory structure in which the Secretary of Labor “brings civil actions on behalf of aggrieved union members. That exclusivity strongly, if not dispositively, suggests that Congress intentionally omitted a private right of action as an alternative way to enforce.”

Brennan also noted union members can file federal complaints after an election, but CTU sought pre-election enforcement. He said allowing such actions would disrupt a congressional choice against allowing litigation to delay union elections. The panel also said other LMRDA provisions do allow pre-election lawsuits from individual union members, allowing the presumption that Congress would have created that permission structure in this instance, if it wanted to.

The panel further noted other federal appellate courts have reached similar conclusions and rejected CTU’s argument that LMRDA’s Title I and Title IV, which covers its complaint, are sufficiently symmetrical to expand protections and procedures from one to the other.

CTU referenced a 1964 U.S. Supreme Court opinion, Local 82 Furniture & Piano Moving v. Crowley, saying it recognized union members’ right to sue their union for interfering with Title I rights, but Brennan noted the opinion reiterated the exclusive remedy stance the panel had already explained.

“So although Crowley did discuss the overlap between Title I and Title IV, the case cannot be read as expanding enforcement” per CTU’s arguments, Brennan wrote.

The panel further rejected CTU’s arguments for why “the explicit remedy, filing a complaint with the Secretary of Labor, is inadequate,” Brennan said, and refused to agree with the implication a private right of action is superior, explaining Congress should be making that type of consequential decision.

In her concurrence, Judge Maldonado said the majority’s result was correct regarding the absence of an implied right of action in this instance but said it needlessly dated the broader doctrine as a relic.

“I have reservations with that gloss such that I cannot join the opinion in full,” Maldonado wrote. “While no longer en vogue, the doctrine of implied rights of action remains alive and has been employed by this circuit and the Supreme Court in more recent years.”

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

WATCH: Homan targets Chicago; Freedom Caucus responds to Pritzker’s ‘move out’ comment

WATCH: Homan targets Chicago; Freedom Caucus responds to Pritzker’s ‘move out’ comment

By Greg Bishop | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – In today's edition of Illinois in Focus Daily, The Center Square Editor Greg Bishop shares some of...
Everyday Economics: Why weak jobs data trumps inflation concerns for Fed policy

Everyday Economics: Why weak jobs data trumps inflation concerns for Fed policy

By Orphe DivounguyThe Center Square The August jobs report delivered a shocking blow, revealing an economy teetering on the edge of a jobs recession. Just 22,000 jobs were added in...
EXCLUSIVE: Secret Service spent $11 million on Hunter Biden travel detail

EXCLUSIVE: Secret Service spent $11 million on Hunter Biden travel detail

By Bethany BlankleyThe Center Square The Biden administration spent more than $10 million over three years on a security detail and related expenses for former First Son Hunter Biden after...
Proposed federal funding bill doles out nearly $16M for electric, hydrogen buses

Proposed federal funding bill doles out nearly $16M for electric, hydrogen buses

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square Nearly $16 million taxpayer dollars are set aside for zero-emission buses and charging stations across the country in one of Congress’ proposed annual government funding...

WATCH: Democrats ‘hate’ Trump more than they ‘love’ their communities, Homan says

By Greg BishopThe Center Square Trump administration border czar Tom Homan says Democrat leaders in sanctuary states and cities hate President Donald Trump more than they care for their communities....
Bipartisan group of lawmakers aim to increase migrant physician jobs

Bipartisan group of lawmakers aim to increase migrant physician jobs

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square A bipartisan group of Congressional lawmakers wants to expand a program that allows noncitizens to fill physician vacancies in rural areas of the United States...

WATCH: Border czar Homan considered turning Trump’s offer down

By Greg BishopThe Center Square Tom Homan, President Donald Trump's border czar, addressed the State Freedom Caucus Foundation Friday night in Dallas.

WATCH: DeSantis addresses State Freedom Caucus Foundation

By Greg BishopThe Center Square Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis addressed the State Freedom Caucus Foundation Friday night in Dallas.
Higher ed spending up as enrollment plummets at Illinois universities

Higher ed spending up as enrollment plummets at Illinois universities

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – A former state lawmaker says Illinois is now tops in the nation on per-student spending in higher...
World's largest retailer struggles to keep costs down as tariffs hit

World’s largest retailer struggles to keep costs down as tariffs hit

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square The world's largest retailer says it's doing everything it can to keep prices low as its costs increase each week due to the tariffs at...
Northwestern president steps down amid federal funding cuts

Northwestern president steps down amid federal funding cuts

By Esther Wickham | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) - Northwestern University President Michael Schill resigned this week amid the federal funding freeze by the Trump administration....
Push to ban stock trading by Congress follows IL rep’s reported violations

Push to ban stock trading by Congress follows IL rep’s reported violations

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – After an Illinois congressman reportedly broke the law with late disclosures of stock trades, another member of...
Illinois quick hits: Giannoulias orders village to stop sharing data with CBP

Illinois quick hits: Giannoulias orders village to stop sharing data with CBP

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square License plate camera data Illinois Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias has ordered the Village of Forest Park and Motorola Solutions to...
Legislation to end cashless bail in D.C., nationwide introduced in Senate

Legislation to end cashless bail in D.C., nationwide introduced in Senate

By Sarah Roderick-Fitch | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Nearly two weeks after President Donald Trump issued executive orders to take steps to eliminate cashless bail...
Chicago ranks near bottom in survey of best and worst run cities

Chicago ranks near bottom in survey of best and worst run cities

By Glenn Minnis | The Center Square contributorThe Center Square (The Center Square) – The city of Chicago ranks near the bottom in the new Best & Worst-run cities in...