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State Supreme Court to Decide Fate of Prop. 22 … and the Gig Economy

State Supreme Court to Decide Fate of Prop. 22 … and the Gig Economy

The constitutionality of Prop. 22 is now before the California State Supreme Court, and we’ll go over the arguments, which the court heard this week, and discuss how gig workers have fared since it became law.

KQED's Forum

May 23, 202455m 48s

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Show Notes

The gig economy, as it has been known, was built around a controversial idea — that an Uber driver, for instance, did not work for Uber. These apps, instead, were merely making a market for workers, which a user could access to hire someone. Many labor leaders rejected this idea, and it has led to fights in the legislature, courts and over Proposition 22 in 2020, when voters handed the gig economy a huge win. The constitutionality of Prop. 22 is now before the California State Supreme Court, and we’ll go over the arguments, which the court heard this week, and discuss how gig workers have fared since it became law.


Guests:


Levi Sumagaysay, economy reporter, CalMatters


Ken Jacobs , co-chair, Center for Labor Research and Education at UC Berkeley


John Mejia, rideshare driver and member of California Gig Workers Union


David Lewis, dasher, Doordash


Molly Weedn, spokesperson, Protect App-Based Drivers & Services coalition

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