(1)Where a trade dispute exists or is apprehended, the Secretary of State may inquire into the causes and circumstances of the dispute, and, if he thinks fit, appoint a court of inquiry and refer to it any matters appearing to him to be connected with or relevant to the dispute.
(2)The court shall inquire into the matters referred to it and report on them to the Secretary of State; and it may make interim reports if it thinks fit.
(3)Any report of the court, and any minority report, shall be laid before both Houses of Parliament as soon as possible.
(4)The Secretary of State may, before or after the report has been laid before Parliament, publish or cause to be published from time to time, in such manner as he thinks fit, any information obtained or conclusions arrived at by the court as the result or in the course of its inquiry.
(5)No report or publication made or authorised by the court or the Secretary of State shall include any information obtained by the court of inquiry in the course of its inquiry—
(a)as to any trade union, or
(b)as to any individual business (whether carried on by a person, firm, or company),
which is not available otherwise than through evidence given at the inquiry, except with the consent of the secretary of the trade union or of the person, firm, or company in question.
Nor shall any individual member of the court or any person concerned in the inquiry disclose such information without such consent.
(6)The Secretary of State shall from time to time present to Parliament a report of his proceedings under this section.