2026年2月3日
Article Series – 1 / 13 观点
At first glance, works council elections may look like a local HR issue. In reality, they can significantly shape how automotive companies manage transformation, restructuring and workforce adjustment in Germany. A recent court ruling puts the personal liability of management into focus.
The Works Council (“WC”) plays a decisive role in plant transformations, workforce reductions, working time models and site decisions. For OEMs and Tier 1 suppliers under pressure to adapt their business models, the composition of a works council will influence whether change projects move forward pragmatically or become prolonged and contentious. Invalid WC-elections or legal challenges often lead to delays, additional costs and management distraction. A hard-won agreement (for example, on a plant restructuring or introducing an IT tool) suddenly has to be renegotiated. As recently illustrated by the WC election of a leading OEM – 36 of 17.000 employees had been incorrectly assigned to the main plant – minor formal errors can have major consequences, such as the re-election of the entire WC.
No. While employees (the election committee) organize the election, HR management is not required to step aside completely; nor should they. They may express opinions, outline expectations for cooperation and flag procedural errors – provided they do not exert pressure or threaten disadvantages.
HR-Managers may, for example:
The key for HR management is balanced engagement: visible, documented and compliant.
Moreover, Management bears considerable responsibility, particularly in large structures or complex corporate groups, for example for:
German employment law protects not only elected works council members, but also people who become involved very early in the process – even before an election committee is formed. For companies undergoing restructuring, this means decisions on terminations, redeployments or role changes should be carefully reviewed if there are any indications of a works council initiative.
German law provides extensive protection for:
The Court confirmed that employees in matrix structures may be entitled to vote in more than one works council election, depending on actual integration.
Integration exists when e.g. a manager helps fulfil a plant’s operational purpose – for example, by directly leading or supervising employees there. As a result, matrix managers supervising teams across several sites can be considered members of multiple plants and therefore eligible to vote at each site.
This has a significant operational impact: voter lists for the WC elections become more complex to prepare, and the risk of election challenges increases if integration is not assessed carefully: Voting rights do depend on actual operational involvement, they do not depend on HR assignments or a “home” plant.
For automotive companies with cross‑site development, production, or engineering teams, this means early coordination is essential to correctly identify who is integrated into which plant and to ensure legally sound elections.
Yes! If a manager intentionally prevents or obstructs a works council election, this can trigger not only labor law claims but also tortious claims for damages, including personal liability of the manager with his or her private assets (LAG München v. 16. April 2025 – 11 Sa 456/23).
The court affirmed piercing liability because a managing director had deliberately violated protective laws in connection with the WC-elections. This is particularly sensitive for international corporations: “Local misconduct” can lead to personal liability for local management, regardless of corporate guidelines or corporate structures. For multinational groups, this highlights the importance of local compliance awareness, especially when it comes to sanctioning employees that play a role in the elections!
Works council elections are not a side issue. For OEMs and Tier 1 suppliers, they are a strategic risk factor – and an opportunity to establish constructive employee relations during a period of profound change. Employers ought to train local HR thoroughly on election regulations and seek early legal advice on the issue. They should treat election related employee sanctions with extreme caution due to potential personal liability!