For Immediate Release
The Center’s friend of the court brief was written by Mackinac Center Senior Legal Analyst Patrick J. Wright, who noted today: "The Supreme Court has previously held that a union may charge nonmembers in a bargaining unit for costs associated with collective bargaining, but that the nonmembers still have the First Amendment right to withhold their support for union political activism. The Washington law kept to that view by preventing a union from spending a nonmember’s money for political causes ‘unless affirmatively authorized by the individual.’ The Washington Supreme Court’s ruling that nonmembers must explicitly refuse to have their money spent on political activity is untenable. It puts the First Amendment rights of a union above those of the people who don’t join the union."
Michigan’s law is similar to the Washington law in requiring employee authorization before an employee’s money can be used by a union political action committee. The consolidated cases now before the U.S. Supreme Court are Davenport v. Washington Education Association and Washington v. Washington Education Association. Oral arguments in the cases are scheduled for Jan. 10, 2007. The Center’s brief is available at www.mackinac.org/8065.
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