Collective action in the United Kingdom including the right to strike in UK labour law is the main support for collective bargaining. Although the right to strike (or "industrial action" traditionally) has attained the status, since 1906, of a fundamental human right, protected in domestic case law, statute, the European Convention on Human Rights and international law, the rules in statute have generated significant litigation. The "right of workers to engage in a strike or other industrial action" is expressly recognised in the Trade Union and Labour Relations (Consolidation) Act 1992 section 180,[1] and has been recognised repeatedly by the Court of Appeal as "a fundamental human right".,[2] and the House of Lords (now Supreme Court).[3] However, UK law has become "the most restrictive on trade unions in the Western world",[4] through a series of rule changes from 1979. In order for a group of workers to take strike action, they must,
If those rules are breached, a trade union will be liable for damages to the employer for the cost of the industrial action, an injunction may be issued against the industrial action going ahead, and workers may be fired even for a good faith trade dispute. The rules on industrial action in the UK have been subject to heavy criticism from the International Labour Organization and led to violations in the European Court of Human Rights.
The right of workers to collectively withdraw their labour has always been used to make employers stick to a collective agreement.[5] At critical moments of history, it also combatted political repression (e.g. the Peasants' Revolt of 1381, and the Indian Independence Movement up to 1947), prevented military coups against democratic governments (e.g. the general strike in Germany against the Kapp Putsch in 1920), and overthrew dictatorships (e.g. in the 2008 Egyptian general strike). Anti-democratic regimes cannot tolerate social organisation they do not control, which is why the right to strike is fundamental to every democratic society, and a recognised human right in international law.[6] Historically, the UK recognised the right to strike in statute at least since 1906.[7] and there was widespread support at common law back into the 19th century.[8]
Historically common law judges, like international law today, argued the right to stop work in a good faith trade dispute was an implied term in every employment contract.[9] On the other hand, differently composed courts have asserted that the common law position sits at odds with international law: that a strike is a breach of contract,[10] and this creates tortious liability for unions organising collective action,[11] unless it falls within an immunity from statute.[12] On this view, even though an employer is not liable for economic loss to workers who are collectively dismissed, a union could be liable to the employer for taking collective action. Economic torts have been said to include conspiracy to injure,[13] inducement of breach of contract,[14] and tortious interference with a contract.[15]
The Conspiracy and Protection of Property Act 1875, repeated in the Trade Disputes Act 1906 after the Taff Vale case created the "golden formula" that collective action by a trade union becomes immune from any liability in tort if done "in contemplation or furtherance of a trade dispute". UK tradition inspired the International Labour Organization Convention 87 (1948) articles 3 and 10,[16] the case law of the European Court of Human Rights under article 11,[17] and the EU Charter of Fundamental Rights article 28. However, the scope of the right to take collective action has been controversial. Reflecting a series of restrictions from 1979 to 1997, the law was partially codified in the Trade Union and Labour Relations (Consolidation) Act 1992 sections 219 to 246, which now falls below international standards.
See also: Strike action. The Trade Union and Labour Relations (Consolidation) Act 1992 section 180 expressly recognises "the right of workers to engage in a strike or other industrial action", and section 219 contains the classic formula that collective action by a trade union becomes immune from any liability in tort if done "in contemplation or furtherance of a trade dispute". This said, various further hurdles must be jumped for a union to be certain of immunity from employers suing for damages, or an injunction to stop a strike.
The meaning of a "trade dispute" under TULRCA 1992 section 244 is confined to mean a dispute "between workers and their employer" and must mainly relate to employment terms. In BBC v Hearn[18] Lord Denning MR granted an injunction against a strike by BBC staff to stop broadcast of the 1977 FA Cup Final to apartheid South Africa. He reasoned that this was a political dispute, not a "trade dispute", unless the union was requesting "putting a clause in the contract" to not do such work. Strikes against government legislation (rather than an employer),[19] or privatisation,[20] or outsourcing before it happens,[21] have been held unlawful. However, at the least, any dispute over the terms or conditions on which workers do their jobs will allow protection.[22]
See main article: Economic tort.
The Trade Union and Labour Relations (Consolidation) Act 1992 section 224 prevents collective action against someone who is "not the employer party to the dispute".[24] "Secondary action" used to be lawful, from the Trade Union Act 1871 until 1927,[25] and again from 1946 till 1980, but today it is not.[26] This makes the definition of "employer" relevant, particularly where a trade dispute involves a company group.[27] A worker's written statement of the contract may purport to say that the only "employer" is a subsidiary, although the parent company carries out the employer's function of ultimately setting the contractual terms and conditions.[28]
Under TULRCA 1992 section 226 a union wishing to take collective action for a trade dispute must conduct a ballot.[29] In summary, the union must give 7 days notice to the employer about holding a ballot, state the categories of employees being balloted, give a total number, all "as accurate as is reasonably practicable in the light of the information".[30] Since the Trade Union Act 2016, there is an additional requirement that a ballot has a 50% turnout for a strike to be supported, and a total of 40% of voters supporting a strike (i.e. an 80% turnout if the vote is evenly split) in "important public services" that include health services, schools, fire, transport, nuclear and border security.[31] A scrutineer must be able to oversee the conduct, the vote must be given to all workers who could strike, the vote must be secret and by post, allowing for 'small accidental failures' which are 'unlikely to affect the result of the ballot'.[32]
The union must inform the employer of the result "as soon as reasonably practicable", call action within four weeks, and tell the employer of the people taking part.[33] The rules are poorly drafted, and this has generated litigation where some courts allowed injunctions on ostensible technical glitches.[34] However, the Court of Appeal since emphasised in British Airways Plc v Unite the Union (No 2)[35] and RMT v Serco Ltd[36] that the rules are to be interpreted consistently with the purpose of reconciling the equally legitimate, but conflicting interests of employers and unions.[37] No employee can be dismissed for taking part in a strike for a period of 12 weeks,[38] so long as the strike is officially endorsed by the union.
See main article: Picketing (protest). Any picketing or protest outside a workplace must be "peaceful" and there must be a picket supervisor.[39] There are a limited number of outright prohibitions on strike action, but in accordance with ILO Convention 87 this is only for workplaces that involve the truly essential functions of the state (for armed forces, police,[40] and prison officers[41]), and only when impartial arbitration is used as an alternative.[42]
If strikes are not conducted in accordance with law, employers can (and often do) go to court to seek an injunction against a union conducting the strike, or potentially damages.[43] A court should not grant any injunction against a strike unless there is a 'serious question to be tried' and it must consider where the 'balance of convenience lies'.[44] In The Nawala the House of Lords stressed that injunctions should be granted rarely and give 'full weight to all the practical realities' and the fact that a court should not end the strike in the employer's favour.[45]