Part V Industrial action

Protection of acts in contemplation or furtherance of trade dispute

220 Peaceful picketing.

1

It is lawful for a person in contemplation or furtherance of a trade dispute to attend—

a

at or near his own place of work, or

b

if he is an official of a trade union, at or near the place of work of a member of the union whom he is accompanying and whom he represents,

for the purpose only of peacefully obtaining or communicating information, or peacefully persuading any person to work or abstain from working.

2

If a person works or normally works—

a

otherwise than at any one place, or

b

at a place the location of which is such that attendance there for a purpose mentioned in subsection (1) is impracticable,

his place of work for the purposes of that subsection shall be any premises of his employer from which he works or from which his work is administered.

3

In the case of a worker not in employment where—

a

his last employment was terminated in connection with a trade dispute, or

b

the termination of his employment was one of the circumstances giving rise to a trade dispute,

in relation to that dispute his former place of work shall be treated for the purposes of subsection (1) as being his place of work.

4

A person who is an official of a trade union by virtue only of having been elected or appointed to be a representative of some of the members of the union shall be regarded for the purposes of subsection (1) as representing only those members; but otherwise an official of a union shall be regarded for those purposes as representing all its members.