Speak Out Act
The Speak Out Act is an Act of Congress which prevents the enforcement of non-disclosure agreements in instances of sexual assault and harassment. Introduced by senator Kirsten Gillibrand of New York during the second session of the 117th Congress, the legislation was approved unanimously in the Senate and was passed by the House of Representatives by a vote of 315 to 109.
President Joe Biden signed the bill into law on December 7, 2022.
Background
One of the MeToo movement's primary targets was the enactment of non-disclosure agreements, which MeToo leaders saw as a tool which sexual predators, especially within corporate American culture, could use in courts to prevent victims from raising concerns of inappropriate behaviors. Beginning mostly under the Biden administration, Congress has responded in a variety of ways, most notably passing the Ending Forced Arbitration of Sexual Assault and Sexual Harassment Act in March 2022, which bans the enforcement of arbitration clauses and class action waivers in cases of sexual harassment.Former Fox News anchor Gretchen Carlson has been a major backer for both this bill as well as other MeToo inspired legislation. On the subject of non-disclosure agreements, Carlson called the vast outreach of the clauses "inane", and further indicated that many employees are pressured into signing these agreements on their first day of employment with a firm.
Congressional findings
In the text of the bill, Congress stated that it had found non-disclosure agreements to perpetuate illegal conduct. Congress also stated that while 81% of women had experienced sexual harassment and assault at work, 43% of men had also experienced similar treatment, and that the freedom to report such conduct should not be inhibited, which banning non-disclosure agreements would enable.Legislative history
The bill was first introduced in July 2022 in the Senate by senator Kirsten Gillibrand with 9 Democratic and 5 Republican cosponsors, including judiciary committee chair Dick Durbin and ranking member Chuck Grassley. The bill passed the Senate with unanimous consent on September 29, 2022.The bill passed the house on November 16, 2022. Of the representatives voting, all 215 Democrats voted in favor. A majority of Republicans, 109 members, opposed the legislation, while a minority of the GOP caucus, 100 members, joined Democrats in supporting it. Both parties' major leadership, including Steny Hoyer and Jim Clyburn on the Democratic side and Kevin McCarthy, Elise Stefanik and Steve Scalise on the Republican side, supported the bill's passage.
Following completion of its Congressional stages, President Joe Biden signed the bill into law on December 7, 2022.