HR-2776-115
Placed on the Union Calendar, Calendar No. 236.
Sponsored by Tim Walberg (R-MI)
What it does
This bill would change the rules the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) follows when workers or employers file a petition to hold a union election. It would require at least a 14-day waiting period before any hearing can begin, and would prohibit the NLRB from scheduling a union election any sooner than 35 calendar days after a petition is filed. It would also set specific criteria — called "community of interest" factors — that the NLRB must use when deciding which workers belong in the same bargaining unit.
Who benefits
Employers, particularly in industries with high union organizing activity (retail, hospitality, food service, manufacturing), who would have more time to communicate with workers before an election is held. Workers who support their employer's position or who want more time to consider union membership before voting. Existing union members in larger, more established bargaining units, since the "community of interest" standard may favor broader unit configurations over smaller, targeted ones.
Who is hurt
Workers who have already decided to unionize and want to hold an election quickly, as the mandatory waiting periods would delay their ability to vote. Union organizing campaigns, which research suggests can lose momentum over longer pre-election periods. Workers in smaller or more specialized job groups who might prefer a narrower bargaining unit, as the "community of interest" factors could result in them being placed in larger units where their preferences are diluted.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the bill restores fairness and deliberation to the union election process. They contend that the NLRB's 2014 "ambush election" rule — which shortened the time between petition and election to as few as 11 days — denied employers their legal right to communicate with employees and left workers without adequate time to make a fully informed decision. A 35-day minimum, they argue, gives all parties time to understand the issues, resolve legal questions before the vote rather than after, and ensure the election reflects a genuine, informed choice. They also argue that codifying clear "community of interest" factors prevents the NLRB from approving artificially small "micro-units" designed to maximize union wins rather than reflect natural workplace groupings.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill tilts the election process in favor of employers by extending the window during which management can pressure, persuade, or discourage workers from voting to unionize. They contend that longer waiting periods historically correlate with lower union win rates, not because workers change their minds freely, but because prolonged campaigns expose workers to sustained employer messaging in a setting where management controls access and communication. They also argue that the "community of interest" standard, as written, could be used to force workers into large, unwieldy bargaining units that are harder to organize, effectively blocking workers from exercising their existing legal right to collective bargaining under the National Labor Relations Act.
Constitutional context
The bill operates under Congress's Commerce Clause authority (Art. I, Sec. 8), which underpins the National Labor Relations Act itself — upheld broadly since NLRB v. Jones & Laughlin Steel (1937). The Necessary and Proper Clause supports Congress's power to set procedural rules for federal agencies like the NLRB. Post-Loper Bright v. Raimondo (2024), courts no longer defer to the NLRB's own interpretation of ambiguous statutory terms, meaning the "community of interest" factors codified here would be interpreted independently by courts. The Tenth Amendment is not directly implicated, as this bill governs private-sector labor relations in interstate commerce, a traditionally federal domain.
Checks and balances
This bill shifts authority from the executive branch (specifically the NLRB, an independent agency) to Congress by codifying procedural timelines and bargaining unit standards directly into statute. Under the prior regulatory framework, the NLRB had broad discretion to set election timelines and unit determinations through rulemaking and case-by-case adjudication. By writing specific minimums (14-day hearing delay, 35-day election delay) and enumerated "community of interest" factors into law, Congress would constrain the agency's administrative discretion. Post-Loper Bright, courts would also play a larger role in independently reviewing whether the NLRB applies these statutory factors correctly.
Historical precedent
The NLRB's 2014 "Representation Case Procedures" rule (the so-called "ambush election" rule) shortened pre-election timelines significantly and is the direct regulatory backdrop this bill responds to. Congress previously attempted to block that rule via the Workforce Democracy and Fairness Act in the 113th Congress (2013). The Taft-Hartley Act of 1947 similarly amended the NLRA to add procedural protections for employers and workers in response to perceived imbalances in the original 1935 Act.