http://www.dailydot.com/politics/donald-trump-volunteer-contract-nda-non-disparagement-clause/
Not to mention his disdain for the authority of the Constitution.
Not to mention his disdain for the authority of the Constitution.
article said:Non-disparagement, non-disclosure, and non-compete agreements—which are all found in Trump's contract—are common in business contracts, but they apply to employees, not volunteers who receive no compensation for their time and work.
In the event of a Trump victory in November’s general election, the non-compete clause could extend until his 2020 reelection campaign or even 2024, at the end of a second Trump term, the document explains. If Trump loses but wants to run again in the next election or in any presidential election in the future, the contract states the volunteer cannot work for another candidate.
Volunteers are, once again, theoretically bound to “to prevent your employees from” working on any other presidential campaign at any point while Trump is running for president, ostensibly locking them into Trump's political career for life.
How do you get this as being meh??
In the event of a Trump victory in November’s general election, the non-compete clause could extend until his 2020 reelection campaign or even 2024, at the end of a second Trump term, the document explains. If Trump loses but wants to run again in the next election or in any presidential election in the future, the contract states the volunteer cannot work for another candidate.
Volunteers are, once again, theoretically bound to “to prevent your employees from” working on any other presidential campaign at any point while Trump is running for president, ostensibly locking them into Trump's political career for life.
How do you get this as being meh??
How do you get this as being meh??
How do you get this as being meh??
Because most of the contract is legitimate under the circumstances I referenced and not enforceable under the others. I don't know that I'd call it "boilerplate" but it's pretty close to it. That is, the drafters of the contract knew how most courts would interpret a given provision or clause, and even though the drafters knew most courts wouldn't buy it, they still threw it in, in the unlikely case it could be used to their advantage down the road.
It probably took about 8 minutes to do, if not less (by copying and pasting it from a different contract and substituting the appropriate terms, e.g. "Trump") and is standard fare when drafting contracts.
And if it makes you feel better, you can't contract away your fundamental rights. In this case, the right to say what you want, provided the absence of slander and/or libel isn't present, once the duty of loyalty to the entity you're providing services for has ceased to be affected.
It really is meh.
How do you get this as being meh??
How do you get this as being meh??
Because most of the contract is legitimate under the circumstances I referenced and not enforceable under the others. I don't know that I'd call it "boilerplate" but it's pretty close to it. That is, the drafters of the contract knew how most courts would interpret a given provision or clause, and even though the drafters knew most courts wouldn't buy it, they still threw it in, in the unlikely case it could be used to their advantage down the road.
It probably took about 8 minutes to do, if not less (by copying and pasting it from a different contract and substituting the appropriate terms, e.g. "Trump") and is standard fare when drafting contracts.
And if it makes you feel better, you can't contract away your fundamental rights. In this case, the right to say what you want, provided the absence of slander and/or libel isn't present, once the duty of loyalty to the entity you're providing services for has ceased to be affected.
It really is meh.
You know this, but what of the average Trump volunteer? I say again, Trump volunteer? What conclusions might they come to if and when they read it? Legal or not, the contract likely has a far more reaching affect than the courts might allow.
So, might as well throw it in, eh?
And then there's this:
An employer cannot lawfully make the signing of an employment agreement, which contains an unenforceable covenant ... a condition of continued employment. Edwards v. Arthur Anderson, 44 Cal.4th 937, in conjunction with:
An employer's termination of an employee who refuses to sign an agreement which contains an unenforceable covenant ... constitutes a wrongful termination in violation of public policy, for purposes of tort of interference with prospective economic advantage. West's Ann.Cal.Bus. & Prof.Code § 16600.
There is nothing unusual about this contract.
a very nice technique for disparagement is to take a complex set of highly specialized things (like legal contractual terms) and point out something that the layperson might find confusing as "surprising and strange", when it is completely standard.
NDAs survive employment, however non-compete (which this is most similar to), does not, as consideration ends.
If you didn't understand the above statement, then your opinion on this contract is based on hype alone.
There is nothing unusual about this contract.
a very nice technique for disparagement is to take a complex set of highly specialized things (like legal contractual terms) and point out something that the layperson might find confusing as "surprising and strange", when it is completely standard.
NDAs survive employment, however non-compete (which this is most similar to), does not, as consideration ends.
If you didn't understand the above statement, then your opinion on this contract is based on hype alone.
Did you miss the part where it doesn't only apply to you but to your employees? Your employees protest Trump and you broke the agreement.
Except much of it is completely unenforceable.Did you miss the part where it doesn't only apply to you but to your employees? Your employees protest Trump and you broke the agreement.
Dude, give it up. It's been explained to you in both technical and layman's terms. There's nothing wrong with the contract.
You make the daring assumption that Trump volunteers know how to read (ba-da-bum).
...
As to Trump volunteers not knowing all of this, everyone is presumed to have notice of their basic rights, and everyone is presumed competent. That is, if one wants to claim incompetency, the burden is on them to prove it.
Except much of it is completely unenforceable.Dude, give it up. It's been explained to you in both technical and layman's terms. There's nothing wrong with the contract.
Except much of it is completely unenforceable.
This is also true. I just read an industry article about how a particular case of exfiltration of data from amanufacturing company was not a breach of a non-compete agreement because of very similar issues. It all comes down to consideration within the contract. At the time of separation, consideration ends.. .so it gets complicated as to how other terms are enforceable. Basically, you can't make someone not do something.. but you can yourself not do something (like pay severance, issue stock options, etc..). but you can't make someone not work somewhere or not tell someone else something that as an employee would have been prohibited. NDAs are the right way to go, not employee contracts with non-compete clauses.