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Search resuls for: "Kenneth Dau"


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Sen. Tim Scott, R-S.C., speaks to a crowd during a presidential campaign kickoff event at Charleston Southern University on May 22, 2023. "Ronald Reagan gave us a great example when federal employees decided they were going to strike," the Republican presidential contender said. "He said, 'You strike, you're fired.' Thousands of auto workers have gone on strike at plants across the country of late, demanding higher wages and better benefits. "There never had a been a president so hostile to union workers, and it could have gone bad," Dau-Schmidt said.
Persons: Sen, Tim Scott, Tim Scott of, Ronald Reagan, Scott, Kenneth Dau, Schmidt, Reagan Organizations: Charleston Southern University, Republican, Cornell ILR Labor, Finance, United Auto Workers, Indiana University Bloomington Locations: Fort Dodge , Iowa, Tim Scott of South Carolina
Employees who withhold their labor can face a number of consequences, including losing their job and health insurance, experts said. And employees "can never be sure their strike will be found to be an unfair labor practice strike," he cautioned. Pay and health insurance is 'a real problem'Workers who go on strike generally lose their wages, Dau-Schmidt said. Kenneth Dau-Schmidt law professor at Indiana University BloomingtonEconomic strikers typically also get their other workplace benefits, including health insurance, nixed. But, he said, "sometimes employers won't kick employees off of the health insurance right away because it escalates the conflict and almost ensures an unhappy ending."
Persons: Johnnie Kallas, Kallas, Sharon, Block, Kenneth Dau, Schmidt, Dau Organizations: Bloomberg, Getty, Cornell University's School of Industrial and Labor Relations, Labor, United Auto Workers, Employees, Harvard Law School, Center for Labor, CNBC, National Labor Relations, Indiana University Bloomington, Railway Labor Act, Workers, Railway Labor, U.S, UPS, Strikers, Indiana University Bloomington Economic
Supreme Court ruling could chill labor strikes
  + stars: | 2023-06-02 | by ( John Kruzel | ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +5 min
Angela Cornell, a Cornell Law School labor law professor, called it "another decision that undermines the capacity of unions to function." MORE STRIKESThe ruling comes at a time of increasing strikes called by U.S. labor unions. Some experts pointed out that the ruling largely preserved the existing legal scaffolding for deciding labor law preemption cases of this kind. The Supreme Court, with its 6-3 conservative majority, has dealt setbacks to organized labor in key cases in recent years. Brudney said Thursday's ruling "was not comparable to that broader trendline" of decisions weakening labor unions.
Persons: Amy Coney Barrett, Angela Cornell, Cornell, Kenneth Dau, Schmidt, Benjamin Sachs, Sachs, Dan Altchek, Saul Ewing, Altchek, James Brudney, Brudney, Anne Marie Lofaso, Lofaso, John Kruzel, Will Dunham Organizations: U.S, Supreme, Taiheiyo Cement Corp, Cornell Law School, Indiana University Maurer School of Law, Harvard Law, Glacier, Inc, International Brotherhood of Teamsters, National Labor Relations, U.S . Bureau of Labor Statistics, Fordham University Law, West Virginia University College of Law, Thomson Locations: Japan, Washington, Philadelphia, California
Total: 3