Two events occurred Monday night one historic, the other rather insignificant which placed an unflattering spotlight on the Supreme Court of the United States.
The historic event was that Politico published an unprecedented leak of a draft majority opinion, by Justice Samuel Alito, which would overrule Roe v. Wade and permit state lawmakers to ban abortion in its entirety in the US. Alitos draft opinion is not the Courts final word on this case, Dobbs v. Jackson Womens Health Organization, but the leaked opinion is the latest in a long list of signs that Roe may be in its final days.
The other event that also occurred last night is that I sent two tweets. One praised whoever leaked Alitos opinion for disrupting an institution that, as I have written about many times in many forums, including my first book, has historically been a malign force within the United States. And a second celebrated the leak for the distrust it might foster in such a malign institution.
The former tweet was phrased provocatively, and it attracted some attention from those on the right, including Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX). So let me clarify that I do not advocate arson as a solution to the Republican Partys capture of the Supreme Court. I metaphorically compared the leak of Alitos opinion to lighting the Court on fire because, as Chief Justice John Roberts noted in his statement on the leak, the Court has extraordinarily strong norms of confidentiality that it zealously protects.
The fact that someone inside the Courts very small circle of trust apparently decided to leak a draft opinion is likely to be perceived by the justices, as SCOTUSBlog tweeted out Monday night, as the gravest, most unforgivable sin.
To this I say, good. If the Court does what Alito proposed in his draft opinion, and overrules Roe v. Wade, that decision will be the culmination of a decades-long effort by Republicans to capture the institution and use it, not just to undercut abortion rights but also to implement an unpopular agenda they cannot implement through the democratic process.
And the Courts Republican majority hasnt simply handed the Republican Party substantive policy victories. It is systematically dismantling voting rights protections that make it possible for every voter to have an equal voice, and for every political party to compete fairly for control of the United States government. Justice Alito, the author of the draft opinion overturning Roe, is also the author of two important decisions dismantling much of the Voting Rights Act.
This behavior, moreover, is consistent with the history of an institution that once blessed slavery and described Black people as beings of an inferior order. It is consistent with the Courts history of union-busting, of supporting racial segregation, and of upholding concentration camps.
Moreover, while the present Court is unusually conservative, the judiciary as an institution has an inherent conservative bias. Courts have a great deal of power to strike down programs created by elected officials, but little ability to build such programs from the ground up. Thus, when an anti-governmental political movement controls the judiciary, it will likely be able to exploit that control to great effect. But when a more left-leaning movement controls the courts, it is likely to find judicial power to be an ineffective tool.
The Court, in other words, simply does not deserve the reverence it still enjoys in much of American society, and especially from the legal profession. For nearly all of its history, its been a reactionary institution, a political one that serves the interests of the already powerful at the expense of the most vulnerable. And it currently appears to be reverting to that historic mean.
There have only been three justices in American history who were appointed by a president who lost the popular vote, and who were confirmed by a bloc of senators who represent less than half the country. All three of them sit on the Supreme Court right now, and all three were appointed by Donald Trump.
Indeed, if not for anti-democratic institutions such as the Senate and the Electoral College, its likely that Democrats would control a majority of the seats on the Supreme Court, and a decision overruling Roe would not be on the table.
So it is ironic for that reason, and others that Alitos draft opinion overruling Roe leans heavily on appeals to democracy. Quoting from an opinion by the late Justice Antonin Scalia, Alito writes that the permissibility of abortion, and the limitations upon it, are to be resolved like most important questions in our democracy: by citizens trying to persuade one another and then voting.
If Alito truly wants to put the question of whether pregnant individuals have a right to terminate that pregnancy up to a free and fair democratic process, polling indicates that liberals could probably win that fight on a national level.
In fairness, polling on abortion often misses the nuances of public opinion. Many polls, for example, allow respondents to say that they believe that abortion should be legal under certain circumstances or in most cases, leaving anyone who reads those polls to speculate under which specific circumstances people think that abortion should be legal.
Perhaps the best evidence that proponents of legal abortion could win a fair political fight, however, is the Supreme Courts own polling. After the Court allowed a strict anti-abortion law to take effect in Texas last fall, multiple polls found the Supreme Courts approval rating at its lowest point ever recorded.
But public opinion may not matter much in the coming political fight over abortion, because Alito and his fellow Republican justices have spent the past decade placing a thumb on the scales of democracy making our system even less democratic than one that already features the Electoral College and a malapportioned Senate.
Alito authored two opinions and joined a third that, when combined, almost completely neutralize the Voting Rights Act, the landmark legislation that took power away from Jim Crow and ensured that every American would be able to vote, regardless of their race.
Similarly, the Courts Republican majority held in Rucho v. Common Cause (2019) that federal courts will do nothing to stop partisan gerrymandering. Alito is also one of the Courts most outspoken proponents of the independent state legislature doctrine, a doctrine that, in its strongest form, would give gerrymandered Republican legislatures nearly limitless power to determine how federal elections are conducted in their state even if those gerrymandered legislatures violate their state constitution.
One of the most troubling aspects of this Courts jurisprudence is that it often seems to apply one set of rules to Democrats and a different, more permissive set of rules to Republicans. Last February, for example, Alito voted with four of his fellow Republicans to reinstate an Alabama congressional map that a lower court determined to be an unconstitutional racial gerrymander.
In blocking the lower courts order, Alito joined an opinion arguing that the lower courts decision was wrong because it was handed down too close to the next election.
But then, in late March, the Court enjoined Wisconsins state legislative maps, due to concerns that those maps may give too much political power to Black people. March is, of course, closer to the next Election Day than February. So it is difficult to square the March decision with the approach Alito endorsed in February though it is notable that the March decision by the Supreme Court benefited the Republican Party, while the previous decision was likely to benefit Democrats.
I could list more examples of how this Court, often relying on novel legal reasoning, has advanced the Republican Partys substantive agenda on areas as diverse as religion, vaccination, and the right of workers to organize. But really, every issue pales in importance to the right to vote.
If this right is not protected, then liberals are truly defenseless even when they enjoy overwhelming majority support.
In Marbury v. Madison (1803), the Supreme Court held that it has the power to strike down federal laws. But the actual issue at stake in Marbury whether a single individual named to a low-ranking federal job was entitled to that appointment was insignificant. And, after Marbury, the Courts power to strike down federal laws lay dormant until the 1850s.
Then came Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857), the pro-slavery decision describing Black people as beings of an inferior order, and altogether unfit to associate with the white race either in social or political relations, and so far inferior that they had no rights which the white man was bound to respect. Dred Scott, the Courts very first opinion striking down a significant federal law, went after the Missouri Compromises provisions limiting the scope of slavery.
Its not surprising that an institution made up entirely of elite lawyers, who are immune from political accountability and cannot be fired, tends to protect people who are already powerful and cast a much more skeptical eye on people who are marginalized because of their race, gender, or class. Dred Scott is widely recognized as the worst decision in the Courts history, but it began a nearly century-long trend of Supreme Court decisions preserving white supremacy and relegating workers into destitution a history that is glossed over in most American civics classes.
The American people ratified three constitutional amendments the 13th, 14th, and 15th to eradicate Dred Scott and ensure that Black Americans would enjoy, in the 14th Amendments words, all of the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States.
But then the Court spent the next three decades largely dismantling these three amendments.
Just 10 years after the Civil War, the Supreme Court handed down United States v. Cruikshank (1875), a decision favoring a white supremacist mob that armed itself with guns and cannons to kill a rival Black militia defending its right to self-governance. Black people, the Court held in Cruikshank, must look to the States to protect civil rights such as the right to peacefully assemble a decision that should send a chill down the spine of anyone familiar with the history of the Jim Crow South.
The culmination of this age of white supremacist jurisprudence was Plessy v. Ferguson (1896), which blessed the idea of separate but equal. Plessy remained good law for nearly six decades after it was decided.
After decisions like Plessy effectively dismantled the Reconstruction Amendments promise of racial equality, the Court spent the next 40 years transforming the 14th Amendment into a bludgeon to be used against labor. This was the age of decisions like Lochner v. New York (1905), which struck down a New York law preventing bakery owners from overworking their workers. It was also the age of decisions like Adkins v. Childrens Hospital (1923), which struck down minimum wage laws, and Adair v. United States (1908), which prohibited lawmakers from protecting the right to unionize.
The logic of decisions like Lochner is that the 14th Amendments language providing that no state may deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law created a right to contract. And that this supposed right prohibited the government from invalidating exploitative labor contracts that forced workers to labor for long hours with little pay.
As Alito notes in his draft opinion overruling Roe, the Roe opinion did rely on a similar methodology to Lochner. It found the right to an abortion to also be implicit in the 14th Amendments due process clause.
For what its worth, I actually find this portion of Alitos opinion persuasive. Ive argued that the Roe opinion should have been rooted in the constitutional right to gender equality what the late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg once described as the opportunity women will have to participate as mens full partners in the nations social, political, and economic life and not the extraordinarily vague and easily manipulated language of the due process clause.
Indeed, one of the most striking things about the Courts Lochner-era jurisprudence is how willing the justices were to manipulate legal doctrines applying one doctrine in one case, then ignoring it when it was likely to benefit a party that they did not want to prevail.
In Hammer v. Dagenhart (1918), for example, the Supreme Court struck down a federal law that prohibited goods produced by child labor from traveling across state lines. The reason Congress structured this ban on child labor in such an unusual way is because the Supreme Court had repeatedly held prior to Dagenhart that Congress could ban products from traveling in interstate commerce among other things, the Court upheld a law prohibiting lottery tickets from traveling across state lines in Champion v. Ames (1903).
But the rule announced in Champion and similar cases was brushed aside once Congress decided to use its lawful authority to protect workers.
The Court also did not exactly cover itself in glory after President Franklin Roosevelt filled it with New Dealers who rejected decisions like Lochner and Hammer. One of the most significant Supreme Court decisions of the Roosevelt era, for example, was Korematsu v. United States (1944), the decision holding that Japanese Americans could be forced into concentration camps during World War II, for the sin of having the wrong ancestors.
The point is that decisions like Alitos draft Dobbs opinion, which would commandeer the bodies of millions of Americans or decisions dismantling the Voting Rights Act are entirely consistent with the Courts history as defender of traditional hierarchies. Alito is not an outlier in the Courts history. He is quite representative of the justices who came before him.
In offering this critique of the Supreme Court, I will acknowledge that the Courts history has not been an unbroken string of reactionary decisions dashing the hopes of liberalism. The Courts marriage equality decision in Obergefell v. Hodges (2015), for example, was a real victory for liberals although, as several commentators have noted, there is language in Alitos draft Dobbs opinion suggesting that, if Roe falls, LGBTQ+ rights could be next.
But the Courts ability to spearhead progressive change that does not, like marriage equality, enjoy broad popular support is quite limited. The seminal work warning of the heavy constraints on the Courts ability to effect such change is Gerald Rosenbergs The Hollow Hope, which argues that courts lack the tools to readily develop appropriate policies and implement decisions ordering significant social reform, at least when those reforms arent also supported by elected officials.
This constraint on the judiciarys ability to effect progressive change was most apparent in the aftermath of perhaps the Courts most celebrated decision: Brown v. Board of Education (1954).
Brown triggered massive resistance from white supremacists, especially in the Deep South. As Harvard legal historian Michael Klarman has documented, five years after Brown, only 40 of North Carolinas 300,000 Black students attended an integrated school. Six years after Brown, only 42 of Nashvilles 12,000 Black students were integrated. A decade after Brown, only 1 in 85 African American students in the South attended an integrated school.
The courts simply lacked the institutional capacity to implement a school desegregation decision that Southern states were determined to resist. Among other things, when a school district refused to integrate, the only way to obtain a court order mandating desegregation was for a Black family to file a lawsuit against it. But terrorist groups like the Ku Klux Klan used the very real threat of violence to ensure few lawsuits were filed.
No one dared to file such a lawsuit seeking to integrate a Mississippi grade school, for example, until 1963.
Indeed, much of the South did not really begin to integrate until Congress passed the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which allowed the Justice Department to sue segregated schools, and which allowed federal officials to withhold funding from schools that refused to integrate. Within two years after this act became law, the number of Southern Black students attending integrated schools increased fivefold. By 1973, 90 percent of these students were desegregated.
Rosenbergs most depressing conclusion is that, while liberal judges are severely constrained in their ability to effect progressive change, reactionary judges have tremendous ability to hold back such change. Studies of the role of the courts in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, Rosenberg writes, show that courts can effectively block significant social reform.
And, while such reactionary decisions may eventually fall if there is a sustained political effort to overrule them, this process can take a very long time. Dagenhart was decided in 1918. The Court did not overrule it, and thus permit Congress to ban child labor, until 1941.
There are several structural reasons courts are a stronger ally for conservative movements than they are for progressive ones. For starters, in most constitutional cases courts only have the power to strike down a law that is, to destroy an edifice that the legislature has built. The Supreme Court could repeal Obamacare, but it couldnt have created the Affordable Care Acts complex array of government-run marketplaces, subsidies, and mandates.
Litigation, in other words, is a far more potent tool in the hands of an anti-governmental movement than it is in the hands of one seeking to build a more robust regulatory and welfare state. Its hard to cure poverty when your only tool is a bomb.
So, to summarize my argument, the judiciary, for reasons laid out by Rosenberg and others, structurally favors conservatives. People who want to dismantle government programs can accomplish far more, when they control the courts, than people who want to build up those programs. And, as the Courts history shows, when conservatives do control the Court, they use their power to devastating effect.
This alone is a reason for liberals, small-d democrats, large-D Democrats, and marginalized groups more broadly, to take a more critical eye to the courts. And the judiciarys structural conservatism is augmented by the fact that, in the United States, institutions like the Electoral College and Senate malapportionment give Republicans a huge leg up in the battle for control of the judiciary.
Of course I do not believe that we should literally light the Supreme Court of the United States on fire, but I do believe that diminished public trust in the Court is a good thing. This institution has not served the American people well, and its time to start treating it that way.
Originally posted here:
The Roe opinion and the case against the Supreme Court of the United States - Vox.com
- Why Work? // Index [Last Updated On: March 26th, 2016] [Originally Added On: March 26th, 2016]
- Wage slavery - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia [Last Updated On: March 26th, 2016] [Originally Added On: March 26th, 2016]
- Wage-Slavery and Republican Liberty | Jacobin [Last Updated On: June 12th, 2016] [Originally Added On: June 12th, 2016]
- wage slavery - Why Work [Last Updated On: June 16th, 2016] [Originally Added On: June 16th, 2016]
- Beyond Wage Slavery: Opening Ken Coates Archive ... [Last Updated On: June 16th, 2016] [Originally Added On: June 16th, 2016]
- Wage slavery - Hermes Press [Last Updated On: June 19th, 2016] [Originally Added On: June 19th, 2016]
- Wage-Slavery and Republican Liberty | Jacobin [Last Updated On: June 19th, 2016] [Originally Added On: June 19th, 2016]
- wage slave - Why Work [Last Updated On: June 19th, 2016] [Originally Added On: June 19th, 2016]
- What is Wage Slavery? (with pictures) - wiseGEEK [Last Updated On: July 31st, 2016] [Originally Added On: July 31st, 2016]
- ecology.iww.org | Abolish wage slavery AND live in harmony ... [Last Updated On: October 6th, 2016] [Originally Added On: October 6th, 2016]
- Wage labour - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia [Last Updated On: October 8th, 2016] [Originally Added On: October 8th, 2016]
- Pudzer isn't looking at the big picture - Las Vegas Sun [Last Updated On: February 6th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 6th, 2017]
- An interesting life through the eyes of a slave driver - Irish Independent [Last Updated On: February 6th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 6th, 2017]
- Why Do We Take Pride in Working for a Paycheck? - JSTOR Daily [Last Updated On: February 6th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 6th, 2017]
- Living off the grid: Neo-peasants in Daylesford, Victoria take on ... - NEWS.com.au [Last Updated On: February 6th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 6th, 2017]
- Scheme for fishing crews is 'legitimising slavery' - Irish Times [Last Updated On: February 7th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 7th, 2017]
- Attending College Doesn't Close Wage Gap and Other Myths Exposed in New Report - The Root [Last Updated On: February 7th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 7th, 2017]
- The Rule of Law and The Working Class - Anarkismo.net [Last Updated On: February 9th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 9th, 2017]
- Wolf budget proposal calls for $12 minimum wage - Scranton Times-Tribune [Last Updated On: February 9th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 9th, 2017]
- Post Slavery Feminist Thought and the Pan-African Struggle (1892-1927): From Anna J. Cooper to Addie W. Hunton - Center for Research on Globalization [Last Updated On: February 15th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 15th, 2017]
- Where did capitalism come from? - Socialist Worker Online [Last Updated On: February 15th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 15th, 2017]
- Believing is seeing - Arkansas Times [Last Updated On: February 15th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 15th, 2017]
- The Two Types of Campus Leftists - National Review [Last Updated On: February 15th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 15th, 2017]
- Uncomfortable truths: The role of slavery and the slave trade in ... - Daily Kos [Last Updated On: February 17th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 17th, 2017]
- Gene Smith: Hard labor, funny money and Tennessee Ernie Ford - Fayetteville Observer [Last Updated On: February 18th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 18th, 2017]
- President Carter: 'We must cling to principles that never change' - Austin American-Statesman [Last Updated On: February 18th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 18th, 2017]
- Point/Counterpoint: On Liberal Capitalism - The Free Weekly [Last Updated On: February 18th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 18th, 2017]
- To make Trump's America ungovernable, African American struggles are key - Green Left Weekly [Last Updated On: February 18th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 18th, 2017]
- Congress of Progressive Filipino Canadians against fascism: Continuing the culture of resistance - Straight.com [Last Updated On: February 19th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 19th, 2017]
- 31 Life Lessons After 30 Years - The Good Men Project (blog) [Last Updated On: February 22nd, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 22nd, 2017]
- What Chaos? The Trump Steam Roller has it Under Control - AmmoLand Shooting Sports News [Last Updated On: February 23rd, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 23rd, 2017]
- Mayor Betsy Hodges says tip credits are bad for women - City Pages [Last Updated On: February 23rd, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 23rd, 2017]
- Washington State Rep Endorsed Slavery When Confronted by Voter - The Pacific Tribune [Last Updated On: February 24th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 24th, 2017]
- Tesla warns that 'thousands' of Model 3 reservations holders will go outside of Connecticut to buy without direct sales - Electrek [Last Updated On: February 25th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 25th, 2017]
- National Prison Strike Exposes Need for Labor Rights Behind Bars - Toward Freedom [Last Updated On: February 28th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 28th, 2017]
- New: Berkeley's New Ideology: A critique of the Strategic Plan - Berkeley Daily Planet [Last Updated On: February 28th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 28th, 2017]
- Gilbert letter: Bill Manahan - Idaho Statesman [Last Updated On: March 1st, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 1st, 2017]
- Forced to work? 60000 undocumented immigrants may sue detention center - Christian Science Monitor [Last Updated On: March 1st, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 1st, 2017]
- Dressing for a Funeral - Sojourners [Last Updated On: March 2nd, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 2nd, 2017]
- The Confederacy was a con job on whites. And still is. - News & Observer [Last Updated On: March 2nd, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 2nd, 2017]
- Slavery 'lieutenant' jailed for 'heinous offences' - Bradford Telegraph and Argus [Last Updated On: March 4th, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 4th, 2017]
- VIDEO: Street cleaners fight for London Living Wage from Continental Landscapes - Your Local Guardian [Last Updated On: March 4th, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 4th, 2017]
- VIDEO: Street cleaners fight for London Living Wage from ... - Wandsworth Guardian [Last Updated On: March 4th, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 4th, 2017]
- Restaurant-backed campaign enters minimum wage debate - Southwest Journal [Last Updated On: March 4th, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 4th, 2017]
- Erica Armstrong Dunbar Talks Never Caught, the True Story of George Washington's Runaway Slave - Paste Magazine [Last Updated On: March 4th, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 4th, 2017]
- Role of servers' tips fires up Minneapolis debate over $15-an-hour ... - Minneapolis Star Tribune [Last Updated On: March 5th, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 5th, 2017]
- Wake Up Call: Harvard Confronts Slavery Ties After Law Students Protest - Bloomberg Big Law Business [Last Updated On: March 6th, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 6th, 2017]
- Fountain pen prices 'write' out there - Sault Star [Last Updated On: March 6th, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 6th, 2017]
- How the Confederacy conned Southern whites. And why some still fall for it today. - The Sun Herald [Last Updated On: March 6th, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 6th, 2017]
- Wage labour - Wikipedia [Last Updated On: March 6th, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 6th, 2017]
- the fire this time. . . . - Frost Illustrated [Last Updated On: March 7th, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 7th, 2017]
- The Confederacy was a con job on whites. And still is. - McClatchy Washington Bureau [Last Updated On: March 7th, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 7th, 2017]
- Wash Post: At Least 60000 Immigrants Were Forced to Work for $1 or Less Per Day - Newsmax [Last Updated On: March 7th, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 7th, 2017]
- Ben Carson Says Slaves In America Were Just Low Wage Immigrants - The Ring of Fire Network [Last Updated On: March 7th, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 7th, 2017]
- Italian Nationalists Vent Fury Following Migrant Camp Fire - Breitbart News [Last Updated On: March 8th, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 8th, 2017]
- ICE Private Prison Facing Lawsuit For Ignoring Anti-Slavery Law - Care2.com [Last Updated On: March 9th, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 9th, 2017]
- Reese vs. Nicole vs. Bette vs. Joan? It's Not Too Early to Get Psyched for Best Actress at the Emmys - Decider [Last Updated On: March 9th, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 9th, 2017]
- Thinking about women Sri Lanka Guardian - Sri Lanka Guardian [Last Updated On: March 9th, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 9th, 2017]
- Child labor in Seattle: Mexican girl kept in near slavery - seattlepi.com [Last Updated On: March 9th, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 9th, 2017]
- 10 Ways American Crime Season 3 Exposes Modern Slavery - Rotten Tomatoes [Last Updated On: March 10th, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 10th, 2017]
- Daily Reads: Trump Fills Government with Lobbyists; It's Been a Hot Winter, Blame Climate Change - BillMoyers.com [Last Updated On: March 10th, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 10th, 2017]
- How a Mini-Retirement Brought Meaning to My Life - Entrepreneur [Last Updated On: March 11th, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 11th, 2017]
- Readers sound off on slavery, the CIA and Mike Francesa - New York Daily News [Last Updated On: March 11th, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 11th, 2017]
- Gumtree pulls 'slave labour' domestic worker advert - Times LIVE [Last Updated On: March 11th, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 11th, 2017]
- Capitalist Globalization of Labor is Modern Colonialism - Truth-Out [Last Updated On: March 11th, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 11th, 2017]
- Raped, beaten, exploited: the 21st-century slavery propping up Sicilian farming - The Guardian [Last Updated On: March 12th, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 12th, 2017]
- Globalization Is Just a Contemporary Word for Financial Colonialism - Truth-Out [Last Updated On: March 12th, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 12th, 2017]
- The pursuit of happiness - The Stringer [Last Updated On: March 17th, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 17th, 2017]
- Community Voice: Straddling a line so fine it's nonexistent - The Bakersfield Californian [Last Updated On: March 17th, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 17th, 2017]
- Ted Kennedy Jr. Proposes a State Bill That Would MANDATE Organ Harvesting - MRCTV (blog) [Last Updated On: March 17th, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 17th, 2017]
- Who would replace immigrant workers? | Tim Rowland ... - Herald-Mail Media [Last Updated On: March 19th, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 19th, 2017]
- We must all stand up to the world's richest nation and oppose its use ... - The Guardian [Last Updated On: March 19th, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 19th, 2017]
- The curious origins of the 'Irish slaves' myth - KERA News [Last Updated On: March 19th, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 19th, 2017]
- The curious origins of the 'Irish slaves' myth | Public Radio ... - PRI [Last Updated On: March 19th, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 19th, 2017]
- Cohen: Trump budget hurts African-Americans - The Commercial Appeal [Last Updated On: March 19th, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 19th, 2017]
- Theresa May WILL back gig economy workers' rights changes, sources say - Business Grapevine [Last Updated On: March 21st, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 21st, 2017]
- PPP rallies supporters in sugar belt to struggle against closure of estates - Demerara Waves [Last Updated On: March 21st, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 21st, 2017]
- Theresa May to back radical overhaul of workers' rights - The Week UK [Last Updated On: March 21st, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 21st, 2017]
- PM backs plans to overhaul workers' rights to reflect gig ecomomy ... - The Guardian [Last Updated On: March 21st, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 21st, 2017]
- Important HR changes from 1st April - HR News (press release) (registration) (blog) [Last Updated On: March 23rd, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 23rd, 2017]