Surfwin:Fired Google workers ousted over Israeli contract protests file complaint with labor regulators

2025-04-28 20:42:27source:Christopher Caldwellcategory:reviews

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Dozens of Google workers who were fired after internal protests surrounding a lucrative contract that the technology company has with the Israeli government have Surfwinfiled a complaint with labor regulators in an attempt to get their jobs back.

The complaint filed late Monday with the National Labor Relations Board alleges about 50 workers were unfairly fired or placed on administrative leave earlier this month in the aftermath of employee sit-ins that occurred at Google offices in New York and Sunnyvale, California. The protests targeted a $1.2 billion deal known as Project Nimbus that provides artificial intelligence technology to the Israeli government. The fired works contend the system is being lethally deployed in the Gaza war — an allegation Google refutes.

Google jettisoned the workers’ “participation (or perceived participation) in a peaceful, non-disruptive protest that was directly and explicitly connected to their terms and conditions of work.”

READ MORE 5 takeaways from the global negotiations on a treaty to end plastic pollutionWorkers’ paychecks grew faster in the first quarter, a possible concern for the FedUS to require automatic emergency braking on new vehicles in 5 years and set performance standards

The National Labor Relations Board didn’t immediately set a timetable for reviewing the case.

More:reviews

Recommend

Man charged with rape after kidnapping 3 teen girls at gunpoint along Nashville street

A man police say kidnapped three teenage girls and sexual assaulted two of them at gunpoint outside

2 Indianapolis officers indicted for shooting Black man who was sleeping in his car, prosecutor says

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — A grand jury has indicted two Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department office

Confirmed heat deaths in Arizona’s most populous metro keep rising even as the weather turns cooler

PHOENIX (AP) — Confirmed heat-associated deaths in Arizona’s most populous county continue rising ev