A U.S. federal judge has granted Amazon a temporary injunction blocking the enforcement of a New York law that allows the state to oversee private-sector union disputes.
The ruling from the Eastern District of New York pauses the law while Amazon’s legal challenge proceeds, citing conflicts with the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA).
Amazon initiated the lawsuit after the Amazon Labor Union, affiliated with the Teamsters, filed an unfair labor practice charge with New York’s Public Employment Relations Board (PERB). The company argues that federal labor law should preempt any conflicting state rules.
Supporters of New York’s law emphasize that it is designed to safeguard workers’ rights amid a federal enforcement gap.
Since January 2025, the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) has lacked a quorum, limiting its ability to handle union oversight effectively. The New York amendments, adopted on September 5, 2025, empower PERB to act where federal enforcement is stalled.
California followed suit with AB 288 on September 30, 2025, adopting similar measures to ensure workers’ protections when federal oversight is impaired. These moves reflect growing state-level experimentation with private-sector union regulations amid federal inaction.
The court’s injunction is narrowly focused, applying only to the parties involved in this case and not to the entire state or other businesses. Legal experts caution that the ruling does not overturn the law itself, leaving the broader legislative framework intact.
The National Labor Relations Board has also filed separate actions to challenge New York’s law and California’s AB 288, arguing that the state measures intrude on federal labor authority and create potentially conflicting regulations for multi-state employers.
The parallel legal disputes have created openings for compliance technology providers, who help businesses navigate overlapping federal and state labor rules.
These tools are increasingly crucial as companies operating across multiple jurisdictions must manage complex regulatory landscapes while avoiding penalties.
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce has weighed in through an amicus brief, urging courts to uphold federal preemption under the NLRA. This signals continued legal uncertainty for states attempting to expand labor oversight and highlights the tension between protecting workers’ rights and preserving federal authority.
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