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Thursday, September 19, 2024

Buckeye Institute urges SCOTUS to protect public employees' First Amendment rights

Opinion
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Robert Alt President and Chief Executive Officer | The Buckeye Institute, OH

Columbus, OH – On Friday, The Buckeye Institute filed an amicus brief in Laird v. United Teachers of Los Angeles (UTLA), urging the U.S. Supreme Court to hear the case. The institute contends that government unions should not use obscure and arbitrary opt-out windows to deny public employees their First Amendment rights or illegally deduct money from paychecks after employees have left the union.

“By claiming that membership cards—which are often intentionally vague on the terms of membership—are legally binding private contracts, government unions continue to illegally deduct dues from employees’ paychecks, forcing them to pay for speech they find abhorrent,” said Jay R. Carson, senior litigator at The Buckeye Institute. “In this case, that speech is a call to defund the police.”

Following the Janus decision, government unions have used vague and obscure opt-out windows to keep public employees locked into union membership. In its brief, The Buckeye Institute argues that signing a membership card—which either makes no mention of how or when members can quit the union or intentionally obscures arbitrary opt-out windows—does not constitute a legally binding contract and is nothing more than “blanket authorizations for the public employer to deduct whatever dues the union instructs for as long as it instructs.”

The Freedom Foundation represents Glenn Laird in Laird v. UTLA.

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