Google Says Staff Have No Right to Protest Its Choice of Clients
- Company is on trial in case brought by federal labor board
- Scope of protection for activism at work has long been debated
Photographer: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg
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Google employees have no legal right to protest the company’s choice of clients, the internet giant told a judge weighing the U.S. government’s allegations that its firings of activists violated the National Labor Relations Act.
“Even if Google had, for the sake of argument, terminated the employees for their protest activities -- for protesting their choice of customers -- this would not violate the Act,” Google’s attorney Al Latham said in his opening statement Tuesday at a labor board trial.