Is it normal for airbnb to spent millions of dollars to weaken the pro act?

Sarah Bianchi, Deputy U.S. trade representative, served as Airbnb's top lobbyist, where she nearly quadrupled the size of Airbnb's lobbying shop and fought against pro-labor legislation including the Protecting the Right to Organize(PRO) Act. The PRO Act would make it easier for employees to form a union and for the NLRB to crack down on union-busting companies.

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Comments ( 2 )
  • LloydAsher

    Air bnb also needs a lot more legal dancing than a normal company because when you rent a place theres no guarantee that the place in question is even safe to habitate.

    Getting into a random dudes car on uber is one thing. Sleeping in a house that might have faulty fire alarms are another.

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  • 1WeirdGuy

    I get it. If you had a company you would probably try to avoid them unionizing also. You dont want to have to answer to someone else on business decisions. It is nice working in a union though but I get why they fight it. Id fight it too.

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