Assignment 2
Unique No:781358
Due 16 September 2025
, Assignment 02
Unique Number: 781358
Due Date: 16 September 2025
Introduction
The case study concerns a primary strike at Tough Steel (TS) and a supportive strike at
Brown Steel (BS), a neighbouring company. The central legal issue is whether the BS
action qualifies as a secondary strike in terms of the Labour Relations Act (LRA) and, if
so, what remedies are available if the strike does not meet the requirements for
protection. This discussion explains the legal meaning of a secondary strike, outlines
the statutory conditions for it to be protected, and considers the possible consequences
for BS if the strike is found to be unprotected.
Definition of a Secondary Strike
The Labour Relations Act describes a secondary strike as a situation where employees
withdraw their labour against their own employer in order to support workers who are
striking at a different employer.
In this scenario, BS employees are not engaged in a dispute with BS itself. Instead, they
are striking in solidarity with TS employees, who are demanding higher wages. That fits
neatly into the definition of a secondary strike under the LRA.
Importantly, the Act does not automatically ban secondary strikes. Instead, it sets out
procedural and substantive requirements that must be met for such strikes to be lawful
and protected. Where these requirements are ignored, the strike is considered
unprotected, and serious consequences may follow for both the workers and the union
that initiated the action.
Requirements for a Protected Secondary Strike