NLRB Judge Commands Google to Reveal Secret Anti-Union Campaign Docs

NLRB Judge Commands Google to Reveal Secret Anti-Union Campaign Docs
A judge's gavel rests on top of a desk in a file photo. Joe Raedle/Getty Images
Benzinga
Updated:

A National Labor Relations Board judge has ordered Alphabet Inc’s Google to “immediately” hand over more than 70 subpoenaed documents related to a secret anti-union campaign, codenamed “Project Vivian,” Los Angeles Times reports. As per the lawsuit, Google ran the campaign to suppress a union drive at the tech giant. The documents include internal communications and strategy information created in conjunction with IRI Consultants, a “labor relations” firm that the company contracted to establish and amplify anti-union messaging.

The judge alleged Google of suppressing the files in ongoing court proceedings related to the firing of three activist employees by improperly citing them as legally privileged communications with their attorneys.

The NLRB first filed its complaint against Google in December 2020.

The NLRB alleged Google of spying on employees, blocking employees from speaking with each other about work conditions, and firing several employees in retaliation for attempting to unionize, deemed illegal under federal labor law.

Price Action

GOOG shares traded lower by 2.51 percent at $2,849.04 on Tuesday.
By Anusuya Lahiri 
© 2021 The Epoch Times. The Epoch Times does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved.