Not according to our constitution, which states elections will be held during convention by delegates. Trust me, I called national, NLRB and DOL to see if they were in compliance by skipping elections. No government office wanted any entity of over 50 people to congregate. They didn't even let congress convene in person. Unfortunately, our by-laws did not allow a mailing ballot. Which should be the first thing addressed at a convention. As well as, a contract review body of average carriers - To keep the Union in touch with working souls.
Elections are dependent on a convention; not the other way around.
Our constitution and our parliamentary authority distinctly separates "nominations and elections" from "conventions".
As an example, let's say we have a convention in 2022. During that convention, let's say a majority of the voting delegates who have been registered as in attendance, representing not less than 25 states, walk out of the meeting in protest right before the election of officers. At that time, the delegates would not have satisfied the constitutional quorum requirement. No official business could carry until the quorum was restored. We would still have a
convention, but no
election.
Naturally, on an issue that involves automatic wins for people getting paid 6-figures and benefits (some of which include paid room, board, and a hefty per diem), if I'm going to trust, I'm also going to want verification.
It should be as simple as "This conflicting federal/state law/regulation/ordinance is what halted our convention". Instead, all I've seen are emotionally-charged arguments of "what the experts say" and claims using unfalsifiable statistical data.
The constitutional requirement to halt a convention is clear. Whether that requirement was met, however, is not.
When you spoke with National, the DOL and the NLRB, did any of them cite the federal/state law/regulation/ordinance that granted the National Board authority to halt our convention?