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Wal-Mart

Wal-Mart

Wal-Mart Wins First Round In Sex Discrimination Legal Fight


Wal-Mart

Wal-Mart's legal team and lawyers representing more than a million women across the country went head-to-head before the Supreme Court in March. Today, the nine Justices handed the company a victory.

In a unanimous ruling, the Court said the 1.5-million plaintiff class action suit is too large to proceed. That reverses a 9th Circuit Court of Appeals ruling that the case could go ahead.

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Topics: Supreme Court, Wal-Mart

Blanche Lincoln

Lincoln Protects Wal-Mart Family Bank From Wall Street Reform


Sen. Blanche Lincoln (D-AR)

Sen. Blanche Lincoln (D-AR) is here to serve Arkansas...or at least its wealthiest residents.

While she finalizes new rules on derivative trading, which have been well received by pro-Wall Street reformers, she's undertaking separate efforts to protect a major Arkansas bank from a different part of the financial reform bill.

According to the Wall Street Journal, Lincoln is hoping to make one of the bill's provisions apply only to banks with $15 billion in assets, thus exempting Arvest Bank Group, largely owned by the same Walton family that founded Wal-Mart.

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Topics: AR-SEN, Blanche Lincoln, Financial Reform, John Boozman, Wal-Mart, Wall Street

Wal-Mart

Will Wal-Mart Cash In Support For Health Care Reform To Crush EFCA?

One of the biggest developments on the health care front this week was Wal-Mart's decision to back an employer mandate as a major provision of reform legislation. The move rankled the Chamber of Commerce, which accused the retail giant of using the government to build competitive advantage against its competitors--all despite the fact that Wal-Mart is the Chamber's largest member. But liberals were by and large pretty happy with the development.

At least as far as health reform goes.

But Wal-Mart is a major stakeholder on a number of key issues, and some wonder whether the Arkansas-based behemoth will try to cash in their support for health reform with the White House when the focus in Washington eventually turns to employee free choice.

Labor sources, well-acquainted with Wal-Mart's anti-EFCA tactics, have suggested or acknowledged this concern to me in the days since the administration announced the deal--and as hard as it is to imagine Wal-Mart fighting that legislation harder than they already do, the sources say both sides may turn up the temperature in the fight over employee rights in the weeks and months ahead.

It's unclear where the basis of this concern lies--whether it comes from internal knowledge of Wal-Mart's negotiations with key health care players in Washington; or from an understanding of the company's incentives; or whether some in the labor movement are using this moment to launch a pre-emptive strike against their main EFCA opponent.

But either way, it's clear that the uneasy alliance between labor and Wal-Mart on the question of health reform does not translate into rapprochement on the issue of unionization. If anything, it makes the fight over that issue bloodier.

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Topics: EFCA, Health Care, Labor, Wal-Mart