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Union Victory in Boeing vs National Labor Relations Board

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Boeing planned to move production facilities to South Carolina as retaliation for previous union activity, but the result was a union victory. Presidential candidate Ron Paul is one of many who have misunderstood the complaint filed with the NLRB.  "Hearing that the NLRB decided to stop pursuing its ongoing harassment of Boeing was welcomed news. I would like to think this is more than just a political move by the Obama administration with an election year looming, but experience tells me otherwise." Boeing agreed to cancel the move from Renton, WA to South Carolina, and that's when the NLRB dropped the complaint.

John Howard (in a previous story) was one of the few who got the original story right. All the cards were on the table, but most of us weren't paying attention:  "I remain astonished at CEO Albaugh’s video taped interview repeatedly stating that the work was moved to South Carolina because of the union’s strikes.  It is even more astonishing that Boeing’s press spokesman clearly stated that the union’s protected strike activity was the major reason the work was moved. Every executive with a union knows that you cannot retaliate against a union for striking." A recent press release from the National Legal and Policy Center sets the record straight, correcting Ron Paul, CNN and everyone else who got it wrong.

NLRB Drops Complaint against Boeing; Unions May Be the Real Winner

 

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