Olson Rug Company, the employer, filed objections to an election, conducted by National Labor Relations Board, among its employees and after an investigation by the Board’s Regional Director, he recommended overruling
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those objections; Olson excepted to the Director’s report and requested a hearing regarding three objections.
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Subsequently, the Board, on August 29, 1957, issued a “Supplemental Decision And Certification of Representatives,” reported in
Counsel for Olson presented an oral argument before the trial examiner on his client’s objections and from that part of the record, certainly, it is clear that he is contending the Board should have allowed Olson to underscore the reasons why the campaign literature infected the election, but there was absent any issue worth considering further. Prattle rather than precision is the dominating characteristic of election publicity and even this situation is not an exception. After studying this record and the campaign materials we think the Board’s discretion remained within permissible limits. Wilson Athletic Goods Mfg. Co. v. National Labor Relations Board, 7 Cir., 1947,
The Board’s order here on review will be enforced and relief sought by petitioner, Olson, is denied.
Enforcement ordered.
Notes
. “The Employer’s first objection concerns written campaign material distributed by Petitioner in which, the Employer alleges, Petitioner either expressly or impliedly averred that if Petitioner lost the election the Employer would alter the wages and working conditions of the employees to their detriment but that Petitioner expected to receive more than two-thirds of the 900 votes that would be cast. The Employer’s contention that these statements constituted threats and misrepresentations which affected the results of the election is patently without merit as they contained neither assertions which the employees could not evaluate nor threats within the Petitioner’s power to •carry out.
“The Employer’s third objection concerns a campaign banner which Petitioner displayed near one of the Employer’s •buildings while voting was in progress. As the banner could not be observed by anyone in the immediate vicinity of the polling place, and bore no resemblance to a sample ballot, we find tbe Employer’s contention, that display of this banner constituted improper electioneering and was tantamount to circulation of an improperly altered sample ballot, to be without merit.
“The Employer’s fourth objection concerns a bulletin distributed by Petitioner which alleged that in the past the Employer had lost “The Ford Contract” because the Employer was not unionized and concluded, ‘Get Ford Back — Vote ‘Yes’ — Vote TWUA!’ The Employer’s contention that Petitioner thereby promised employees a benefit in exchange for an affirmative vote is plainly without merit; as found by the Regional Director, Petitioner’s assertion was evidently an opinion or prediction of one consequence of Petitioner’s victory and it was, in any event, a benefit not within the power of Petitioner to confer upon the employees.”
