Posts tagged Alabama Policy Institute

    Americans for Prosperity Leads Employee Rights Act Coalition

    September 8, 2025 // Protect workers’ right to a secret ballot in union elections. Preserve flexible self-employment career-paths across American industries. Protect small businesses that operate as franchises and vendors for other businesses. Give workers control over their personal information during union campaigns. Allow workers in Right-to-Work states to opt out of union representation. Require opt-in consent for union political spending. Prohibit mandatory DEI mandates in union contracts. Ensure only citizens or authorized workers vote in union elections.

    API fighting to protect overtime tax cut for those ‘trying to work a little harder’ in Alabama

    January 14, 2025 // “[T]he idea is, when people are trying to provide for their family working extra time, why would we tax them? Why would the state tax them for that work at a higher rate? And so yeah, that overtime tax elimination was accomplished in 2023 and it has a 2025 sunset, which means that it goes away, meaning that the tax comes back in 2025 unless the legislature act,” Smith said. “And so we’re advocating that the legislature actually makes that permanent, because we believe in the concept of work and the fact that there is dignity in work, and we don’t think that the state should be charging people extra for trying to work a little harder.”

    Alabama bill cutting economic incentives to keep unions from ‘strong arming employees’ advances

    April 5, 2024 // An Alabama Senate committee Wednesday approved a bill that would withhold economic incentives from companies that voluntarily recognize unions or do not hold secret ballots in union elections. . SB231, sponsored by Sen. Arthur Orr, R-Decatur, passed the Senate Fiscal Responsibility and Economic Development Committee on an 11-3 vote, down party lines.

    Bill clawing back incentives from companies who voluntarily recognize unionization approved by Senate committee

    April 5, 2024 // According to Orr's bill, no employer would be eligible to receive an economic development incentive for a project if the employer voluntarily grants recognition rights for the employees solely and exclusively based on signed labor organization authorization cards if the selection of a bargaining representative may be conducted through a secret ballot election. “I’m not anti-union. Unions are a lot like good government; they’re a necessary evil. They have their place in the workforce, but there are a lot of companies that can’t afford the labor, the expense, or the unionization and the demands that come with it and the added expense,” State Sen. David Sessions (R-Grand Bay) said during the meeting. “What you’re going to wind up doing is if those companies unionize, you’re putting them out of business. You’re putting them out of business and you’re losing all of those jobs.” An employer who voluntarily discloses an employee's personal contact information to a labor organization or third party acting on behalf of a labor organization without the employee's prior written consent, unless otherwise required by state or federal law, would also be ineligible for economic development incentives under the bill.