State GOPs: no benefits unless you shut up and obey your boss


Writing in the NYT, Corey Robin highlights the frightening trend in state GOP labor laws to deny unemployment benefits to workers who are fired for breaking the "behavioral norms" demanded by employers, from dating workers from rival companies to posting unhappy work-related remarks to the Internet. Conservative douchebag Ben Stein loves these rules, and wants high schools to help instill them by vigorously punishing "talking back" — if you're subordinate, you need to learn not to be insubordinate.

For more background, see the Economic Policy Institute's 2013 report, The Legislative Attack on American Wages and Labor Standards, 2011–2012.

And if workers don't learn that lesson in junior high, recent Republican changes to state unemployment codes will ensure that they learn it as adults. In 2011, Florida stipulated that any employee fired for "deliberate violation or disregard of the reasonable standards of behavior which the employer expects" would be ineligible for unemployment benefits. Arkansas passed a similar amendment ("violation of any behavioral policies of the employer"). The following year so did South Carolina ("deliberate violations or disregard of standards of behavior which the employer has the right to expect") and Tennessee. The upshot of these changes is that any employee breaking the rules of her employer — be they posting comments about work on Facebook, dating a co-worker or an employee from a rival firm, going to the bathroom without permission — can be fired and denied unemployment. Faced with that double penalty, any worker might think twice about crossing her boss.

What might Adam Smith, often claimed as the intellectual godfather of the American right, have said about these legislative efforts? "Whenever the legislature attempts to regulate the differences between masters and their workmen," wrote Smith in "The Wealth of Nations," "its counsellors are always the masters. When the regulation, therefore, is in favour of the workmen, it is always just and equitable; but it is sometimes otherwise when in favour of the masters."

Indeed.


The Republican War on Workers' Rights [Corey Robin/NYT]

(via Crooked Timber)

(Image: "How Am I Doing Guy?", Laura, CC-BY)