Summary
The Suwon District Court issued a partial injunction May 18, 2026, requiring Samsung union members at safety/security facilities, equipment preservation operations, and semiconductor wafer contamination prevention work to maintain normal staffing during any strike. The order also bars the union and leader Choi Seung-ho from occupying facilities, installing locks, or obstructing worker entry. The ruling sides with management’s argument that disruptions to critical facilities could threaten safety and semiconductor production. Worker count cited: ~50,000 (higher than the 45,000 figure in Fortune).
Key points
- Court: Suwon District Court (the regional court covering Samsung’s main fabs)
- Injunction targets three specific production-line categories: safety/security, equipment preservation, wafer contamination prevention
- Union and leader Choi Seung-ho prohibited from occupying facilities, installing locks, or obstructing worker entry
- ~50,000 worker count (vs. Fortune’s 45,000) reflects union polling vs. official tallies
- Union demands restated in the article: removal of 50% performance-bonus cap; 15% of operating profit allocation
Newsletter angles
- The court order is the negotiating leverage made legally explicit. The injunction does not address the wage fight; it carves out which production-line categories must stay staffed if the wage fight goes nuclear. That kind of order is what a company files when production loss is the actual leverage. Newsletter angle: name the structure rather than describing the ruling.
- Wafer contamination prevention is the most operationally specific carve-out. Memory fabs run continuous wafer processing where unattended contamination ruins entire lots. The court isn’t protecting workers’ safety in the abstract — it’s protecting Samsung’s ability to restart production after the walkout ends without losing weeks of yield.
- Korean industrial-relations precedent. Partial injunctions during work stoppages at chaebol-tier firms are uncommon and signal regulatory comfort with management’s framing of production criticality.
Entities mentioned
- Samsung
- Choi Seung-ho (new)
- Suwon District Court (new)
Concepts mentioned
- Chokepoint Control — court ruling makes the production-line criticality legally explicit
- HBM — wafer contamination prevention is HBM-line-specific
Quotes
“The decision largely accepted management’s argument that disruptions to critical facilities could threaten safety and semiconductor production.”
Notes
Korea Herald reports ~50,000 workers. Fortune (May 17) reports ~45,000. HR Online (May 14) reports 41,000 willing initially with potential 50,000+. Variance is from union polling vs. official membership tallies — not a contradiction, just different measurement timestamps. The Korea Herald figure is from the day of the injunction (May 18) and is the freshest count.