On April 21, 2026, in Cemex Construction Materials Pacific, LLC v. National Labor Relations Board, Case No. 23-2302 (9th Cir.), the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit declined to evaluate the new union-organizing standard adopted by the National Labor Relations Board (“NLRB” or the “Board”) in Cemex Construction Materials Pacific, LLC, 372 NLRB No. 130 (2023) (“Cemex”). The Ninth Circuit’s decision is an unpublished memorandum disposition.  

The court held that the employer’s unfair labor practices during and leading up to a union representation election were sufficient to warrant a bargaining order under the traditional NLRB v. Gissel Packing Co., 395 U.S. 575 (1969) standard, making it unnecessary to reach the Board’s newer Cemex framework.  

Background

As previously reported, the NLRB’s 2023 Cemex decision—one of the most significant Board rulings of the Biden administration—upended nearly 50 years of precedent by creating a new framework for responding to union recognition demands and lowering the bar for remedial bargaining orders.

Under Cemex, an employer confronted with a recognition demand must decide within two weeks whether to (a) accept recognition and bargain, or (b) file an RM petition to test the union’s majority status. Cemex also replaced the longstanding Gissel standard for bargaining orders: if the Board finds that an employer committed unfair labor practices frustrating a free, fair, and timely election, it will dismiss the election proceedings and issue a bargaining order as the default remedy. Since Cemex was issued, employers have broadly challenged this framework.  

The Case

The Ninth Circuit heard oral argument in October 2024 (discussed here) but held its ruling until a separate Ninth Circuit panel resolved a related challenge to one of the remedies the Board imposed on Cemex.

Although the panel devoted significant attention at oral argument to the Board’s new bargaining-order standard, the court ultimately sidestepped the issue in its decision.

The court reasoned that the Board was “well within its range of discretion” to issue a bargaining order under the traditional Gissel standard, making it unnecessary to opine on Cemex because doing so would “unnecessarily delay th[e] case’s resolution.”

In dissent, Judge Richard Clifton would have vacated the Board’s bargaining order and remanded for further consideration, finding that the Board’s decision to change the bargaining-order standard cast “a substantial shadow on everything the Board did with this case.”  Though Judge Clifton did not directly address Cemex’slegality, he called the Sixth Circuit’s rejection of the Cemex bargaining-order framework in Brown-Forman Corp. v. NLRB (reported on here) “persuasive.” 

Takeaways

The Cemex framework remains good law—unless and until reversed by the Supreme Court or, more likely, the NLRB itself reverses it. 

The Board has continued to apply Cemex (as reported here), but is expected to overturn the decision once a third Republican member is confirmed by the Senate and the NLRB regains a three-Member majority. 

This reflects the Board’s recent pattern of continuing to apply Biden-era precedents when it lacks the votes to overturn them.  A recent example is the Board’s application of McLaren Macomb, 372 NLRB No. 58 (2023)—which held that broad confidentiality and non-disparagement clauses in severance agreements violate Section 8(a)(1) of the National Labor Relations Act—in Prime Communications, LP, 374 NLRB No. 88 (2026). 

As we recently reported, on April 13, 2026, President Trump nominated James Macy to fill the third vacant Republican seat on the NLRB and re-nominated Democratic Board member David Prouty to a second term—a political maneuver that may speed Senate confirmation for both nominees.  Once confirmed, the reconstituted Board could move to reconsider Cemex, McLaren Macomb, and many other Biden-era NLRB decisions.  We will continue to monitor these developments.

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Photo of Joshua Fox Joshua Fox

Joshua S. Fox is a partner in the Labor & Employment Law Department and a member of the Sports, Labor-Management Relations, Class and Collective Actions and Wage and Hour Groups.

As a member of the Sports Law Group, Josh has represented a number…

Joshua S. Fox is a partner in the Labor & Employment Law Department and a member of the Sports, Labor-Management Relations, Class and Collective Actions and Wage and Hour Groups.

As a member of the Sports Law Group, Josh has represented a number of Major League Baseball Clubs in all aspects of the salary arbitration process.  Josh also has extensive experience representing professional sports leagues and teams in grievance-arbitration proceedings, and has played a key role in representing professional sports leagues in all aspects of their collective bargaining negotiations with players and officials, including the Major League Baseball, National Hockey League, the National Football League, Major League Soccer, the Professional Referee Organization, and the National Basketball Association.  Josh has also represented teams and arenas in all aspects of labor relations involving labor unions representing arena staff.

In addition, Josh has extensive experience representing clients in the performing arts industry, including the New York City Ballet, New York City Opera, Big Apple Circus, among many others, in collective bargaining negotiations with performers and musicians, the administration of their collective bargaining agreements, and in grievance arbitrations.

Josh also represents a diverse range of clients, including real estate developers and contractors, pipe line contractors, hospitals, hotels, manufacturers and public employers, in collective bargaining, counseling on general employment matters and proceedings before the National Labor Relations Board, New York State Public Employment Relations Board and arbitrators.

Josh also serves as an adjunct professor at Cornell University’s School of Industrial Labor Relations for several years, teaching a course regarding Major League Baseball salary arbitration.

Prior to joining Proskauer, Josh worked for a year and a half at the National Hockey League, where he was involved in all labor and employment matters, including preparations for collective bargaining, grievance arbitration, contract drafting and reviewing and employment counseling. Josh also interned in the labor relations department of Major League Baseball and at Region 2 of the National Labor Relations Board. He was a member of the Brooklyn Law Review and the Appellate Moot Court Honor Society and served as president of the Brooklyn Entertainment and Sports Law Society.

Photo of Yonatan Grossman-Boder Yonatan Grossman-Boder

Yonatan (Yoni) Grossman-Boder is a special labor relations counsel in the Labor & Employment Law Department. Yoni assists clients in a wide range of labor and employment law matters, including litigations, administrative proceedings, arbitrations, internal investigations, labor-management relations and claims of employment discrimination…

Yonatan (Yoni) Grossman-Boder is a special labor relations counsel in the Labor & Employment Law Department. Yoni assists clients in a wide range of labor and employment law matters, including litigations, administrative proceedings, arbitrations, internal investigations, labor-management relations and claims of employment discrimination, harassment, retaliation, and wrongful termination. He frequently represents clients across a variety of industries and sectors, including educational institutions, financial services, media and entertainment companies, health services and professional services.

Yoni clerked for the Honorable Richard M. Gergel of the U.S. District Court for the District of South Carolina.  While attending Duke University School of Law, Yoni served as the publication and lead articles editor of Law and Contemporary Problems.

Prior to coming to Proskauer, Yoni served as a legal intern at the New York Human Resources Administration Employment Law Unit. As a legal intern, he worked on a variety of employment matters, including employment discrimination investigations and litigation. While a summer associate at Proskauer, Yoni co-authored an article on retiree health care benefits under ERISA titled “Understanding M&G Polymers v. Tackett,” published by Benefits Magazine in April 2015.

Delia Karamouzis

Delia Karamouzis is an associate in the Labor Department and is a member of the Employee Litigation & Counseling Group.