3 Ways Workers' Rights Are on the Chopping Block Under President Trump
Judging by the first Trump administration, workers and unions are set to face new attacks and a rollback of rights.
Samantha Sanders November 26, 2024
Much of the Trump-Vance campaigns platform was designed to provoke outrage rather than to supply policy details. So, if youre trying to figure out what to actually expect from the coming second Trump administration, its helpful to look at the record of Trumps first term in office, as well as the individuals and organizations that influenced the 2024 GOP campaign. When it comes to workers rights, that record is crystal clear: from attacks on unions and workers freedom of speech to rolling back laws that would have boosted paychecks or expanded worker safety protections, Trump has been a disaster.
These are just a few of the major changes in policy that workers can likely expect in the Trump-Vance administration:
Ending proactive government support for the right to form a union. One of the first and easiest moves to expect would be removing Jennifer Abruzzo, who is the General Counsel at the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB). Abruzzo is arguably one of the most effective forces for workers in the Biden administration, and has taken many proactive steps to defend the right to form and join unions. Her office has put checks on bosses surveilling workers, gotten workers rehired when their employer illegally fired them for trying to form a union, and held employers accountable for illegal union-busting all of which has put her squarely in the crosshairs of the pro-corporate lobby. Billionaire Trump advisor and federal government contractor Elon Musk has even challenged the NLRBs constitutionality in court, rather than be held accountable for allegedly illegally firing SpaceX employees who tried to raise workplace concerns.
Further crackdowns on immigrants in the workplace. Trump and his allies have pledged to re-ignite an aggressive wave of worksite immigration raids, large-scale deportations, and the stripping of temporary work authorization statuses. These actions could economically devastate immigrant workers, the industries they work in, and all those who live and work alongside them. There are 31 million immigrants in the U.S. workforce, representing about 18.6% of all workers in the U.S. in 2023. All workers U.S.-born, citizens and r immigrants alike lose out when immigrants are targeted at work and put at risk of deportation. Why? Because employers will take advantage of fear over their status to exploit them, pushing down wages and working conditions for everyone.
FULL story: https://inthesetimes.com/article/donald-trump-labor-unions-nlrb-workers