Emрloyees at Petitioner’s nursing home voted to unionize, and Petitioner filed objections to the union’s campaign methods with NLRB’s Regional Director, asserting that the methods included racially inflammatory appeals. The Regional Director conducted an investigation, but conducted no hearing before overruling Petitioner’s objections and certifying the union. The NLRB refused to review the Regional Director’s decision, detеrmining that Petitioner “raised no substantial issue warranting review.” Petitioner subsequently declined the union’s overtures to bargain, and the NLRB ordered Petitioner to cease and desist from refusing to bargain. Petitioner seeks an evidentiary hearing on its objections while the NLRB seeks enforcement of its order. We must determine whether a substantial and material factual issue existed with respect to the Petitioner’s complaint. Becausе we find that factual issues exist, we remand the case for a hearing and refuse enforcement of NLRB’s order.
I.
Petitioner maintains that the union sought unlawfully to arouse and exploit racial feelings among the minorities in the voting unit. Specifically, Petitioner objects to three cartoons and one quote that appeared in some of the twenty-three handbills the union published over the course of the campaign.
The first cartoon, appearing in the April 28, 1993 handbill, shows a white man flipping a coin and saying “I’ll take a dozen” while a group of workers looks on. Although the racial composition of the group in the drawing cannot be determined with certainty, many of the workers are clearly intended to appear black. The second cartoon appeared in the May 10 handbill, and depicts a group of people laboring to pull a wagon, in which are a woman in a chair, a man at the rear holding something like a portable radio and a person at the front of the wagon brandishing a whip. The caption has the man with the whip saying “You are employed at my Will!!!” The third cartoon, in a July 21 handbill, shows a white “boss” pointing a nervous-looking black worker to an electric chair, stating “You don’t need your union *804 rep. Just have a seat and we’ll disсuss your grievance like two rational human beings.” All three cartoons are crudely rendered and are obviously unprofessional.
On June 21, 1993, the union handbill contained the following quotation from a famous speech of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.:
We’ve got some difficult days ahead. But it really doesn’t matter with me now. Because I’ve been to the mountain top. Like anybody, I would like to live a long life. Longevity has its place- But I’m not concernеd about that now. I just want to do God’s will!
And He’s allowed me to go up to the mountain. And I’ve looked over, and I’ve seen the Promised Land. I may not get there with you, but I want you to know tonight that we as a people will get to the Promised Land.
So I’m happy tonight. I’m not worried about anything. I’m not fearing any man. ‘Mine eyes have seen the glory of the coming of the Lord.
Petitioner points to two factors which it maintains demonstrates that there werе racial tensions among the workers prior to the election. First is the voting pattern. The voting unit was comprised of seventy-three black employees (61.9% of the total) and forty-five white employees (38.1%); sixty-eight employees (61.3% of those voting) voted in favor of the union, forty-three (38.7%) against. Petitioner claims that these numbers provide evidence that employees voted largely according to race. Secоnd, Petitioner asserts that racial slurs directed by black workers toward a white security guard shortly after the election demonstrate that racial tensions existed before the election.
II.
“In reviewing whether the Board properly denied a hearing to the objecting party, the court must determine whether the Board acted arbitrarily in exercising its discretion.”
NLRB v. Eurodrive, Inc.,
III.
A.
The seminal case in this area is
Sewell, swpra.
In
Sewell,
the employer, whose plants were in Georgia, circulated a picture of a white woman dancing with a black man, a picture of a white man (identified as the union leader) dancing with a black woman, and commentary that the union sought to integrate blacks and whites. The employer also sent numerous articles which set forth that the union had donated money to the NAACP and the Congress of Racial Equality, and wrote notes in the margins which said that, if given the opportunity, the employer would vote against the union because he did not want to enable the union to support these causes. The NLRB described the employer’s actions as a “deliberate, sustained appeal to racial prejudice.”
Sewell,
The NLRB set aside the election, and in doing so, set the standard by which claims of appeals to racial prejudice are measured. The NLRB characterized its function as “insur[ing] that the voters have the opportunity of exercising a reasoned, untrammeled choice for or against labor organizations seeking representation rights.” Id. at 69. Therefore, the NLRB seeks to provide as close to “laboratory” conditions as reasonable and to avert any elements that will “prevent or impede a reasoned choice.” Id. at 69-70. Hоwever, the NLRB cannot censor all campaign propaganda. A certain amount of pro *805 paganda is tolerated as long as it is “not so misleading as to prevent the exercise of free choice.” Id. at 70. Where the voters cannot exercise their free choice, the election result is not a reliable indicator of the wishes of the voters. Id. at 71.
In its discussion of the racial appeal in Sewell, the NLRB set forth the relevant test.
What we have said indicates our belief that appeals to racial prejudice on matters unrelated to the election issues or to the union’s activities are not mere “prattle” or puffing.... The Board does not intend to tolerate as “electoral propaganda” appeals or arguments which can have no purpose except to inflame the racial feelings of voters in the election....
So long, therefore, as a party limits itself to truthfully setting forth another party’s position on matters of racial interest and does not deliberately seek to overstress and exacerbate racial feelings by irrelevant and inflammatory appeals, we shall not set aside an election on this ground.
Id. at 71-72 (emphasis in original). Therefore, where a campaign statement has racial overtones, the courts must look at the context to determine whether the statement is related to lеgitimate election issues and is truthful or whether, on the other hand, the statement deliberately seeks to overstress and exacerbate racial feelings by irrelevant and inflammatory appeals. Id. at 72. The party making the racially-based statements has the burden of demonstrating that the statement was “truthful and germane”. Id. Any doubts are to be resolved in favor of the objecting party. Id.
B.
There have been two main lines of cases stemming from Sewell. The first is represented by cases in which a prejudicial remark is directed toward a specific person or group. In these cases, the NLRB generally requires a hearing, because there is no question but that an appeal was made to racial prejudice in a manner unrelated to any legitimate campaign Neme.
In
NLRB v. Eurodrive,
In
NLRB v. Silverman’s Men’s Wear, Inc.,
Similarly, in
NLRB v. Katz,
C.
The second line of the Sewell progeny comprises eases in which courts generally have not required a hearing, and embraces circumstances in which an union has attributed racial discrimination to the employer, or in which there appears an isolated racial slur.
In
NLRB v. Herbert Halperin Distrib. Corp.,
In
State Bank of India v. NLRB,
IV.
We examine the cartoons in this case within the context of the racial tensions alleged to exist at Petitioner’s nursing home. The voting patterns — though they appear to be remarkably correlated with the raciаl breakdown of the workforce — do not, in this court’s estimation, provide evidence of preelection racial tension. However, the racial *807 slurs flung at a white security guard just after the election most certainly do. 1 Racial tensions and rancor of the type clearly exemplified by such foul statements simply do not appear suddenly. 2 Petitioner thus had pointed out to the Regional Director evidence showing that the pre-election circumstances included racial discord.
Next, we must consider whether the cartoons served only a legitimate campaign purpose or whether there is a material issue as to whether they “deliberately [sought] to overstress and exacerbate racial feelings by irrelevant and inflammatory appeals.”
Se-well,
This case is more akin to the first line of post-Sewell cases, discussed in part III.A., supra. Although the written captions to two of the cartoons make a passing reference to a legitimate campaign issue, 3 the imagery used in the drawings is, under the circumstances, quite troubling.
The NLRB asserts that there was no racial appeal and nothing inappropriate in the cartoons because each cartoon illustrated the benefits of having a union — that each cartoon referred in some way to a legitimate campaign theme, such as employment at will, negotiated grievance procedures, and lack of respect for employees. Although this may be true, it is also true that the way in which these themes were depicted could also be seen as glaring, graphic appeals to rаcial prejudice. Each cartoon uses obvious images of bondage or violence visited upon racial minorities by a white majority: a white man purchases a group of black (or mostly black) workers; a group of workers labor as beasts of burden, pulling their superiors in a wagon while being whipped; a black worker is to be summarily executed by a white overlord. The court finds that the imagery used can be construed at a glance as invoking tokens of slavery and racial oppression, and that the cartoons could therefore be construed as a deliberate exacerbation of racial feelings by irrelevant and inflammatory appeals. 4
The NLRB found that the quote from Martin Luther King, Jr., was “devoid of inflammatory rhetoric or appeals to racial bigotry.” The court agrees with this characterization. We must note, however, that the quote is equally devoid of anything related to the cause of bettering the wages and working conditions of the employees in question. The NLRB argues that the words can be construed as encouragement for the employees to be “patient and calm.” The excerpt printed by the union, though, contains no such thought. It is simply the portion of the speech most commonly associated with the belief that Dr. King had experienced a kind of premonition on the brink of his impending assassination. 5 In pertinent part, he said
*808 I would like to live a long life.... I may not get there with you, but ... we as a people will get to the Promised Land.... 6
This was not, as in
Hobco Mfg. Co.,
Petitioner argues, though not forcefully, that it is the quoted call to “wе as a
people
” which, in the context of the racially-charged cartoons, should have been interpreted as racially inflammatory. The Board argues, though not persuasively, that the quote is altogether relevant and served only to bring calm to the pre-election period. We agree with neither position, but we do find that the quote “does not deliberately seek to overstress and exacerbate racial fеelings by irrelevant and inflammatory appeals.”
Sewell,
V.
As
Sewell
clearly sets forth, “where there is doubt as to whether the total conduсt of such party is within the described bounds, the doubt will be resolved against him.”
Sewell,
We hold that the Petitioner has raised substantial and material factual issues and has proffered evidence that establishes a pri-ma facie case for setting aside the election. We hold further that, when it upheld the Regional Director, the Board acted arbitrarily in exercising its discretiоn. Accordingly, enforcement of the NLRB’s order is DENIED and the proceedings REMANDED to the Regional Director for a hearing on Petitioner’s objection to the cartoons.
Notes
. The security guard’s report indicated that certain black persons in a crowd "celebrating” outside the front door just after the election said "we got our union and your white ass won't be here tomorrow”; "your [sic] mad because your white ass ain't got no job now”; and "now we have a union [and] the white motherfucking bastards have to hire us back and get rid of all the security”.
. It does not matter whether these tensions existed before the campaign or were created by the campaign.
Eurodrive,
. The cartoon showing a cigar-smoking white man purchasing "a dozen" racial-minority people contains no caption. The coin he is flipping may be intended to be a dime; if so, a mеssage may be inferred that blacks and other minorities are seen as "dime a dozen” commodities and thus nearly worthless. Or perhaps the message could mean that workers generally are viewed as fungible. The former of these implied messages is obviously inflammatory, while the latter is an arguably job-related comment on the sensitivity of the management.
. We do not believe that the possibility of racial diversity in the group of workers in the first two cartoons somehow insulates the cartoons from Petitioner’s attack. It is the strong imagery combined with the clear showing that at least some blacks are intended to be depicted therein which could be construed as a direct appeal to racial bias.
. One historian has called it "an awe-inspiring moment of premonition and prophecy.” Jaroslav Pelikan, The Things You’re Liable to Read in the Bible, N.Y. Times, Dec. 20, 1992, § 7, at 3.
. The allusion is Biblical and refers to Moses being allowed by God only to view the Promised Land — Canaan—-from the top of the mountain; he would never reach that destination with his people.
