In 2018, the Supreme Court settled a fundamental question of constitutional law in Janus v. AFSCME. The Court held, with clarity and conviction, that public employees cannot be compelled to pay union dues as a condition of their employment. This ruling was a massive victory for the First Amendment, affirming that no public servant should be forced to subsidize a private organization’s political agenda against their own will.
In the years since, the promise of Janus has often been obstructed by bureaucratic inertia and creative union tactics designed to keep employees tied to their payroll deductions. While the constitutional right to dissent exists on paper, the mechanics of the workplace have frequently been used to silence it.
That is why SB 312, legislation recently passed and signed into law by Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry, is such a significant and common-sense victory. By codifying protections for public employees, Louisiana is following the lead of freedom-loving states like Tennessee and Florida, ensuring that the promise of Janus is not just a high-level legal theory but a practical reality for the people serving their communities.
Thanks to the leadership of the Pelican Institute for Public Policy and the Louisiana Association of Business & Industry, Louisiana joins Tennessee and Florida in recognizing that true employee liberty requires more than just a court ruling—it requires a legislative framework that protects the worker from coercion. This bill does not merely acknowledge the Janus precedent; it builds the infrastructure necessary to make those rights a living reality for public sector employees in the Pelican State.
At the heart of this victory is the restoration of the paycheck as the property of the worker, not a mechanism for state-sanctioned collections. By mandating that public employees be given annual notifications of their right to opt out, the state is finally ensuring that workers are treated as informed adults rather than subjects of institutional inertia. No longer will an employee have to navigate a maze of union red tape to exercise a basic constitutional freedom; they will now be empowered to cease financial obligations immediately, without being locked into predatory, unwaivable agreements that unions use to trap members in perpetuity.
By ensuring these deductions stop as soon as practicable, and no later than the next paycheck, the state creates a transparent, enforceable standard.This is a critical development, as it establishes a clear path for state action. If an employer fails to stop these deductions, it creates a concrete basis for a civil rights lawsuit, effectively putting the power of the law on the side of the employee rather than the union hierarchy.
This legislation builds on decades of work to guarantee the rights of working Americans. It’s fundamentally about protecting the dignity of work and the freedom of association. When public employees are empowered to make their own choices regarding their hard-earned paychecks, the entire public sector benefits. Unions, like any other organization, should be required to earn the voluntary support and trust of their members. If they provide genuine value, they have nothing to fear from a workforce that is empowered to say yes or no on their own terms.
“Louisiana’s public employees take pride in their hard work to deliver services to our state and communities. They should be rewarded for their dedication and given the choice of how to spend their paycheck, not trapped in an organization they feel doesn’t serve them,” said Sarah Harbison, General Counsel at the Pelican Institute for Public Policy.
At Workers for Opportunity, we believe that every worker deserves to experience the dignity of work in pursuit of the American Dream. That dream includes the right to choose whether to support an organization with part of your paycheck and free from intimidation.
The Louisiana bill is a positive step that shifts the balance of power back to the individual. It’s a victory for every teacher, first responder and public employee who values their constitutional rights. I applaud the Louisiana legislature for its commitment to workplace liberty, and I thank Gov. Jeff Landry for signing this bill into law. It’s a model that should inspire every state to ensure that the voice of the worker is never silenced by the status quo.
David Guenthner is the executive director of Workers for Opportunity at the Mackinac Center for Public Policy.
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