I abhor labor unions wasting time, money and energy on political issues completely unrelated to their core mission.
Having said that, I also abhor grandstanding congressmen looking to score cheap political points. The aggrieved union members need to file a formal complaint with the National Labor Relations Board and l…
I abhor labor unions wasting time, money and energy on political issues completely unrelated to their core mission.
Having said that, I also abhor grandstanding congressmen looking to score cheap political points. The aggrieved union members need to file a formal complaint with the National Labor Relations Board and let the administrative process run its course. Congress needs to stay out of it at this point. I guess after they collected some scalps from the college presidents they're out for blood again.
If Congress has oversight in this matter they should investigate it. As antisemites seem proud of themselves, why is exposing it a cheap political point?
I'm not sure if Congress really has oversight. Their claim to oversight of the colleges was tenuous at best.
My fear is that politicians try to score some quick points without effecting true structural change and they drop the subject as soon as it's time to move on to the next photo opportunity. In this case, it seems the NLRB is the more appropriate route that could lead to substantive changes.
I abhor anti-Semitism
I abhor labor unions wasting time, money and energy on political issues completely unrelated to their core mission.
Having said that, I also abhor grandstanding congressmen looking to score cheap political points. The aggrieved union members need to file a formal complaint with the National Labor Relations Board and let the administrative process run its course. Congress needs to stay out of it at this point. I guess after they collected some scalps from the college presidents they're out for blood again.
If Congress has oversight in this matter they should investigate it. As antisemites seem proud of themselves, why is exposing it a cheap political point?
I'm not sure if Congress really has oversight. Their claim to oversight of the colleges was tenuous at best.
My fear is that politicians try to score some quick points without effecting true structural change and they drop the subject as soon as it's time to move on to the next photo opportunity. In this case, it seems the NLRB is the more appropriate route that could lead to substantive changes.
Maybe a union full of lawyers would know whether it’s within the law for Congress to claim oversight.