After months of political wrangling and legal uncertainty, the National Labor Relations Board will soon be back in business. On Tuesday, the Senate voted to confirm four new members of the five-person NLRB and re-confirm current chairman Mark Gaston Pearce.
“Every day, the NLRB is focused on the concerns of working Americans, from eliminating unfair labor practices to upholding the right of employees to join a union and bargain collectively with their employers,” said President Obama in a statement. “I applaud the Senate for putting in place a full board and look forward to working together on other steps we can take to grow our economy.”
The NLRB requires a quorum of at least three people in order to issue official decisions. In January 2012, in an attempt to reach a quorum and circumvent Senate obstructionism, the president appointed two of his nominees to the board via recess appointment. But in January of this year, the D.C. circuit court declared his recess appointments unconstitutional. The NLRB contested the ruling and vowed to continue issuing decisions, leaving the legal valence of those decisions in limbo.









