Trump Says He's Aiming to Shield Corporations From Legal Liability for Workers Who Contract Covid-19 on the Job

Authored by commondreams.org and submitted by OldFashionedJizz
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President Donald Trump said during a press briefing Monday evening that his administration is aiming to shield corporations from legal responsibility for workers who contract the novel coronavirus on the job, a move that the Chamber of Commerce and right-wing advocacy groups are aggressively lobbying for as the White House pushes to reopen the U.S. economy against the warnings of public health experts.

"We are trying to take liability away from these companies," Trump said in response to a reporter's question on the subject. "We just don't want that because we want the companies to open and to open strong. But I'll get you a legal opinion on that."

The president claimed that his administration had not previously discussed the issue of corporate liability, but the New York Times reported that business executives raised the matter with Trump in a conference call last week.

An "issue of great concern to the executives on the call," according to the Times, "was the need to address the liability companies could face if employees got sick after returning to work, given the possibility that workers who felt that they were brought back too soon—or were not placed in a safe environment—could sue en masse."

Additionally, the Washington Post reported earlier this month that Trump administration officials discussed including in the next stimulus package "a waiver that would clear businesses of liability from employees who contract the coronavirus on the job."

REPORTER: [If companies] have employees come back to work and they get sick will these companies be liable? … TRUMP: I’ll give you a legal answer to that when we look it up. … REPORTER: You guys haven’t discussed that yet? SCROLL TO CONTINUE WITH CONTENT Progressive independent media doesn’t exist without support from its readers. There’s no way around it. No ads. No billionaires. Just the people who believe in this mission and our work. If you believe the survival of independent media is vital to do the kind of watchdog journalism that a healthy democracy requires, please support non-profit Common Dreams today:

TRUMP: Nobody’s discussed it, no. But we will now. pic.twitter.com/oDIo6BQbdS — JM Rieger (@RiegerReport) April 20, 2020

In a memo to its members last week, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce—the most powerful business lobbying group in the nation—said that legal action from workers who are infected by Covid-19 on the job is "perhaps the largest area of concern for the overall business community."

The Chamber of Commerce "argues the sheer number of lawsuits could overwhelm businesses," Roll Call reported.

"Businesses say they keep their workplaces safe," Roll Call noted, "but the memo indicates that major corporations privately acknowledge that many so-called essential employees will get sick or die."

Americans for Prosperity, a Koch-backed organization, is also urging lawmakers to protect corporations from responsibility for exposing their workers to the coronavirus.

As Common Dreams reported last week, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) has been flooded with thousands of complaints from workers in recent weeks accusing employers of violating federal coronavirus guidelines and failing to provide adequate protective equipment.

Justin Wolfers, an economics professor at the University of Michigan, wrote in a series of tweets last week that "the whole point of making employers liable for risking the lives of their staff is to prevent them from exposing their staff to undue risk."

"Businesses are asking for the right to expose their workers to fatal risks with no consequences. It's bad economics and bad policy," said Wolfers. "If this tweet sounds to you at all anti-business, let me be clear: I am absolutely against businesses profiting by exposing their workers to unconscionable risks of death."

Verustratego on April 21st, 2020 at 12:48 UTC »

Someone once told me around 20 years ago. "Never kill yourself over your work because they'll have your replacement in the very next day"

I never thought they'd try to make it policy though

Metrostation984 on April 21st, 2020 at 12:30 UTC »

Man, the Republicans in charge right now REALLY hate the working class huh?

AvidLerner on April 21st, 2020 at 11:28 UTC »

"We are trying to take liability away from these companies," Trump said in response to a reporter's question on the subject. "We just don't want that because we want the companies to open and to open strong. But I'll get you a legal opinion on that."

The president claimed that his administration has not previously discussed the issue of corporate liability, but the New York Times reported that business executives raised the matter with Trump in a conference call last week.

The corporations and Trump demanding employees return to work quickly, but both accept no liability for their actions. This is what a reckless economy looks like that is due to crash.

Trump claiming people are ready to go back to work, it's safe, but just in case sign a waiver protecting your employer from allowing you to get infected while at work, like the conservative companies that own the meat packing plants with hundreds of infected employees they could care less about.

The new economy kills it's workers. Not a good business model for long duration.