• Home
  • About
  • Links

Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Franken goes to bat against forced arbitration again

October 9, 2009 by Peter Gosselar

Sen. Al Franken, the new patron saint of fair arbitration, tore into an arbitration apologist Wednesday, administering a beating that one would more expect to see in a boxing ring than a committee hearing room. If you don’t believe me, watch for yourself.

Poor Mark de Bernardo, a partner at corporate-side employment law firm Jackson Lewis LLP, was on the receiving end, Franken poked holes in everything from de Bernardo’s underlying argument, to his command of the “facts” he cited, to the accuracy of the footnotes in his written statement. Watch the video and count how many times the senator cuts off de Bernardo’s equivocation with variations on the theme of, “Please answer yes or no, sir.”

Franken didn’t spend the whole afternoon on the offensive, however. He began his time by thanking Jamie Leigh Jones for her “courage,” “persistence,” and “strength.” As we reported last week, Jones may finally get her day in court – for some of her claims – four years after she was raped and nearly two-and-a-half years after she first filed suit. We wish her best of luck with her case.

Meanwhile, there’s been more press coverage of the Franken Amendment we mentioned last week. In the mainstream press, ABC and the AP wrote on the bill, which passed the Senate by the comfy margin of 68-30. The blogosphere noticed it as well, with stories appearing in the Huffington Post, Think Progress, and Consumerist. The thirty “nay” votes triggered a fair amount of snark, with Kos headlining “GOP backs corporate rape” and Wonkette doing what they do best.

  • Share this:

Possibly related posts: (automatically generated)

  • America’s most trusted newsman tackles Republican opposition to the Frank…
  • End abuses by government defense contractors!
  • Letter from David Arkush on the Franken amendment in Washington Post
  • So Much for “Not Ready for Prime Time”

Posted in Congress, Consumer Protection | Tagged access to justice, Al Franken, arbitration, Halliburton, Jamie Leigh Jones, KBR | 1 Comment

One Response

  1. on November 19, 2009 at 3:49 pm Shame on the U.S. Chamber of Commerce «

    [...] activists like you helped urge lawmakers to pass Sen. Al Franken’s (D-Minn.) amendment to the Department of Defense Appropriations Bill (H.R. 3326). The Franken Amendment would prevent [...]



Comments are closed.

  • Follow Our Tweets!

    • Sign Petition @change: Amend the Constitution to Prevent Corporate Control of Our Elections http://chn.ge/9FNQvW 10 hours ago
    • Some info. on the latest #Gulf explosion: Company that owns rig has ties to #Enron, evaded royalties. http://bit.ly/bvx6x0 #BP #oil #p2 14 hours ago
  • Support Our Work

  • Socialize With Us

  • Categories

  • Visit Our Other Sites

    • Public Citizen Read our reports and publications
    • Eyes on Trade Challenging globalization
    • Citizen Energy Fighting for a sustainable future
    • Law & Policy Justice for consumers
    • Texas Vox Activism from the Lone Star state
    • Worst Pills An independent pharma watchdog
  • Recent Comments

    gnudarwin on Another oil rig explodes in Gu…
    Elmer on Want to get out of jury duty? …
    nellypc on Astroturf alert: Rallies again…
    CS on “Dead Bird Island…
    CS on Warning: Hot Coffee may change…
  • Flickr Photos

    dorry1

    dorry2

    dorry3

    More Photos
  • Watch videos at Vodpod and other videos from this collection.
  • Tags

    access to justice Activism arbitration bailout banking big oil BP Campaign Finance campaign finance reform Citizens United Congress Consumer Protection corporate power DISCLOSE Act Don't Get Rolled economy Energy energy & climate EPA fair trade FDA financial reform first amendment free trade global warming government reform gulf of mexico Health health & safety health care health care delivery Lobbying lobbyists money in politics obama offshore drilling oil oil spill scotus single-payer Supreme Court Transparency Transportation wall street wto
  • Archives

  • Meta

    • Register
    • Log in
    • Entries RSS
    • Comments RSS
    • WordPress.com
  • Spam Blocked

    22,848 spam comments blocked by
    Akismet

Blog at WordPress.com.

Theme: Mistylook by Sadish.


loading Cancel
Post was not sent - check your email addresses!
Email check failed, please try again
Sorry, your blog cannot share posts by email.