100 Years of 100 Things: The National Labor Relations Board
The Brian Lehrer Show
WNYC
4.6 • 1.5K Ratings
🗓️ 27 January 2025
⏱️ 35 minutes
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| 0:00.0 | Listener supported WNYC Studios. |
| 0:07.0 | It's the Brian Larry Show on WNYC. Good morning again, everyone. Now we continue our WNYC |
| 0:25.9 | Centennial series, 100 years of 100 things. It's thing number 62, almost 100 years of the National |
| 0:33.6 | Labor Relations Board. But rather than start in 1925, as we ordinarily would, we're going |
| 0:39.6 | to start in the present because the Trump election was fueled by the votes of working class Americans, |
| 0:45.9 | very much so, including some unions. But given Trump's actual record, one of the big questions |
| 0:51.1 | for the new administration is whether he is really for the working class |
| 0:54.9 | and will empower workers differently from past Republican presidents, or will he be exposed to many of his supporters as kind of a fake populist in this regard? |
| 1:06.2 | For example, as our guest will tell us, Elon Musk filed a lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of the very existence of the NLRB, the National Labor Relations Board, after it accused him of firing some workers illegally. |
| 1:22.5 | And here's a clip of Trump at an event in August talking to Musk and supporting the idea of firing workers who go |
| 1:30.4 | on strike. |
| 1:31.8 | This cutter, I mean, I look at what you do. |
| 1:34.0 | You walk in and you just say, you want to quit? |
| 1:36.7 | They go on strike. |
| 1:37.9 | I won't mention the name of the company, but they go on strike and you say, that's okay, |
| 1:41.4 | you're all gone. |
| 1:42.7 | You're all gone. |
| 1:43.6 | So every one of you is gone. |
| 1:44.8 | And you are the greatest. You would be very good. Oh, you would love it. |
| 1:48.8 | Trump in August with Musk, troittling in response. So what is the National Labor Relations Board? |
| 1:56.3 | Well, it was created by President Franklin Roosevelt and Congress in 1935 as part of the National Labor Relations Act, which established a right to organize and go on strike. |
| 2:08.6 | The law also became known as the Wagner Act because it was sponsored by U.S. Senator Robert F. Wagner of New York. |
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