A 24-Hour Update: Legal De-escalation as Both Sides Withdraw Police Complaints, Personal Information Protection Act Cases Continue
Published: May 25, 2026
By: Zeeshan Khan
Reading time: 9 minutes
Category: Labor / Technology / Semiconductors
Note: May 25, 2026 – This is an update to the May 24, 2026 article: Samsung Electronics Union Vote: Turnout Surges Past 70% as Dispute Over Excluded Union Intensifies
SEOUL – May 25, 2026 – While voting continues on the tentative wage agreement that averted a strike, Samsung Electronics and its labor union have agreed to withdraw all legal complaints related to the recent labor dispute. This 24-hour update covers the legal de-escalation, the status of criminal cases under the Personal Information Protection Act, and the ongoing ratification vote timeline.
This article covers the specific developments in the last 24 hours: the mutual withdrawal of police complaints, the legal limitations of such withdrawals under South Korean law, and the current status of the ratification vote ahead of its May 27 close.
The Essentials: Who, What, When, Where, Why, How (Last 24 Hours)
Who: Samsung Electronics management (led by CEO Jun Young-hyun); the Samsung Electronics Labor Union; the National Samsung Electronics Union (NSEU); police investigators; and prosecutors who may review pending cases.
What: Mutual agreement to withdraw all legal complaints previously filed against each other. This includes police complaints filed in April 2026 over allegations of “blacklist” creation and unauthorized collection of employee data.
When: Agreement confirmed on May 25, 2026. The complaints were originally filed in April 2026. The withdrawal reflects minutes from a labor-management meeting on the performance-based pay structure.
Where: Labor-management meeting documented in official minutes. Police complaints were previously filed with South Korean law enforcement authorities.
Why (Immediate Cause): Both sides seek to normalize labor relations following the May 20 tentative wage agreement that averted a strike scheduled for May 21. The withdrawal of legal complaints is intended to improve workplace culture following weeks of intense conflict.
How (Mechanism): Through mutual agreement documented in labor-management meeting minutes. Both parties have agreed to withdraw their respective complaints. However, criminal cases under the Personal Information Protection Act cannot be automatically closed by complainant withdrawal.
Specific Updates in the Last 24 Hours (May 24–25, 2026)
1. Mutual Withdrawal of Legal Complaints Confirmed
On May 25, 2026, Samsung Electronics and its labor union confirmed they have agreed to withdraw all legal complaints filed against each other related to the recent labor dispute.
Background of Original Complaints: In April 2026, Samsung management filed a police complaint against union members, alleging they created and distributed a “blacklist” of colleagues who did not participate in strike activities. The union separately filed a complaint alleging the company had unlawfully collected employee data.
Statement from Labor-Management Minutes: The withdrawal agreement is reflected in official minutes from a labor-management meeting on the performance-based pay structure. The minutes state that both sides agree to withdraw all complaints and normalize labor relations.
Purpose: The withdrawal is intended to improve workplace culture and restore strained labor relations following weeks of intense conflict.
2. Legal Limitation: Personal Information Protection Act Cases Not Automatically Closed
A critical legal distinction has emerged: not all criminal cases can be resolved simply because the complainant withdraws.
Offenses Requiring Victim Complaint (반의사불벌죄): For certain offenses, if the victim does not wish to punish the perpetrator, the case cannot proceed. However, alleged violations of the Personal Information Protection Act generally do not fall under this category.
Current Status: According to legal reporting, the withdrawal of complaints by Samsung does not automatically close the criminal cases. Alleged violations of the Personal Information Protection Act can proceed even if the complainant withdraws.
Practical Impact: Samsung’s shift in position could be taken into account by investigators, prosecutors, and courts if the cases proceed to trial. However, the legal process may continue independently.
3. Ratification Vote Continues Unchanged
The legal withdrawal agreement does not affect the ongoing ratification vote on the tentative wage agreement.
Vote Timeline (Unchanged):
- Voting began: May 22, 2026, at 2:00 p.m. KST
- Voting closes: May 27, 2026, at 10:00 a.m. KST
- Method: Mobile electronic voting
Turnout (as of May 23 morning): 74.27% (42,551 of 57,290 eligible members)
Requirements: More than half of eligible members must participate, and a majority of those who vote must approve for the agreement to pass.
4. Exclusion of Donghaeng Labor Union Remains in Effect
The May 25 legal withdrawal does not address the exclusion of the Donghaeng Labor Union from the ratification vote.
Current Status: Approximately 12,800 Donghaeng members (primarily DX division workers) remain excluded from voting. Donghaeng continues its parallel referendum and has stated it will pursue legal remedies regarding the exclusion.
Ministry Interpretation (May 23): The Ministry of Employment and Labor confirmed that unions not participating in joint bargaining at the time of the agreement are not obligated to be granted voting rights under current labor law.
Comparison: Before and After the May 25 Update
| Element | As of May 24, 2026 (Previous Article) | As of May 25, 2026 (Current) |
|---|---|---|
| Legal complaints status | Active; separate legal risks identified | Mutually withdrawn by agreement |
| Personal Information Protection Act cases | Not specifically addressed | Continue independently; withdrawal does not automatically close cases |
| Ratification vote | Active; 74.27% turnout | Active; unchanged |
| Donghaeng exclusion | Active; contested | Active; unchanged |
| Shareholder opposition | Active; rally held | Active; no new update |
| Vote approval outlook | Likely but contested | Likely but contested |
Current Vote Outlook (Updated for May 25)
The legal withdrawal does not materially change the vote outlook.
Why Approval Remains Likely
| Factor | Explanation |
|---|---|
| DS division numerical majority | Approximately 80% of eligible voters (57,290) are from DS division |
| High turnout already achieved | 74% turnout reduces risk of failure due to low participation |
| Tangible wins for DS workers | 6.2% raise + uncapped bonus + housing loans |
Why Rejection Remains Possible
| Factor | Explanation |
|---|---|
| Donghaeng’s rejection campaign | 12,800 DX workers actively campaigning against the deal |
| Bonus disparity visibility | 100x gap between DS memory (up to 600M won) and DX (~6M won) |
| Shareholder legal challenge risk | Commercial law challenge to bonus program possible |
Timeline of Key Events (Updated Through May 25)
| Date | Event |
|---|---|
| April 2026 | Samsung files police complaint over alleged “blacklist”; union files complaint over data collection |
| May 18, 2026 | NLRC-mediated post-mediation talks begin |
| May 20 (morning) | Third mediation meeting collapses; union announces strike |
| May 20 (evening) | Labor Minister intervenes; six-hour mediation produces tentative agreement |
| May 20 (10:30 p.m.) | Union announces strike suspended; vote scheduled |
| May 21 | Original strike start date – no action occurs; CEO Jun issues unity message |
| May 22 (2:00 p.m. KST) | Voting begins |
| May 22 (evening) | Turnout surpasses 66% within hours |
| May 23 (morning) | Turnout reaches 74.27%; Donghaeng exclusion announced |
| May 23 | Ministry issues legal interpretation; shareholders rally |
| May 25 | Mutual withdrawal of legal complaints confirmed |
| May 27 (10:00 a.m. KST) | Voting closes; results expected shortly after |
What Happens Next (As of May 25, 2026)
Immediate Status (May 25-27)
Voting continues with high turnout. The main union’s vote remains active. Donghaeng continues its parallel referendum. The mutual withdrawal of legal complaints is documented but does not automatically close Personal Information Protection Act cases.
After Vote Close (May 27)
If Main Union Vote Approves:
- The 2026 wage agreement becomes binding for all Samsung Electronics employees
- Donghaeng may file a petition with the National Labor Relations Commission over exclusion
- Shareholders may pursue commercial law challenge to bonus program
- Legal cases under Personal Information Protection Act may continue independently
If Main Union Vote Rejects:
- Both sides return to bargaining table
- Donghaeng’s rejection campaign would be vindicated
- Union has indicated strike preparations would resume
- Government likely to invoke emergency mediation authority
Legal Status to Monitor
- Personal Information Protection Act Cases: These may proceed regardless of complaint withdrawal. Samsung’s shift in position could be considered by investigators and courts.
- Donghaeng’s Labor Commission Petition: Could result in ruling that exclusion was improper.
- Shareholder Commercial Law Challenge: Could invalidate the 10-year bonus program.
Why This Matters (Updated for May 25)
The mutual withdrawal of legal complaints represents a significant step toward normalizing labor relations after weeks of conflict. However, the legal complexity of South Korea’s Personal Information Protection Act means that some criminal cases may continue independently.
For Samsung management and union: The withdrawal reduces immediate legal tension but does not guarantee all cases will close. Cooperation with ongoing investigations remains possible.
For the ratification vote: The legal withdrawal does not affect the outcome. The vote proceeds as scheduled with results expected May 27.
For Samsung’s DX division workers: The exclusion from voting remains unresolved. The 100x bonus disparity (600M won vs. 6M won) remains the central point of contention.
For South Korean labor law: How the Personal Information Protection Act cases proceed – with or without complainant cooperation – will set precedents for future labor disputes involving data collection allegations.
Current Status Summary (As of May 25, 2026, 12:00 UTC / 9:00 p.m. KST)
| Question | Answer |
|---|---|
| Have legal complaints been withdrawn? | YES – mutual agreement confirmed May 25 |
| Does withdrawal automatically close all cases? | NO – Personal Information Protection Act cases may continue independently |
| Is the ratification vote still active? | YES – voting continues until May 27 at 10:00 a.m. KST |
| Current turnout? | 74.27% (as of May 23 morning) |
| When does voting end? | May 27 at 10:00 a.m. KST |
| Are Donghaeng members still excluded? | YES – approximately 12,800 members remain excluded |
| What is the confirmed bonus gap? | DS memory: up to 600M won; DX: ~6M won |
| Is the agreement expected to pass? | Likely, but contested with legal risks |
Sources
- Yonhap News Agency (May 25, 2026) – “Samsung Electronics and labor union agree to withdraw legal complaints” – Mutual withdrawal confirmation, Personal Information Protection Act distinction
- Yonhap News Agency (May 25, 2026) – “Labor-management minutes reflect agreement to drop charges” – Meeting minutes documentation
- Yonhap News Agency (May 23, 2026) – “Samsung Electronics union vote turnout exceeds 70%” – Turnout figures (74.27%, 69.15%)
- Yonhap News Agency (May 23, 2026) – “Donghaeng Labor Union excluded from Samsung vote” – Exclusion details, press conference
- Financial News (May 23, 2026) – “Confirmed bonus disparity at Samsung” – 600M won vs 6M won figures
- Yonhap News Agency (May 23, 2026) – “Ministry of Employment and Labor: Exclusion lawful” – Legal interpretation
- AJU PRESS (May 23, 2026) – “Samsung shareholders rally against bonus program” – Shareholder opposition
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