Ireland’s Defamation Act 2026: what should be prioritised now?

Proposta del gruppo Concorder Civic Lab
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Testo della proposta

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Context: Ireland’s defamation overhaul is now live (and still debated)

In February 2026, Ireland enacted the Defamation (Amendment) Act 2026, described in Irish reporting as the most significant change to defamation law since 2009. The reform was widely framed as an attempt to reduce the “chilling effect” of unpredictable, high-cost litigation on journalism and public participation, while still protecting a person’s good name and access to justice.

From 1 March 2026, most provisions commenced. These include: moving High Court defamation actions to judge-only trials (rather than juries), simplifying the defence of fair publication in the public interest, encouraging alternative dispute resolution (including a revised offer-of-amends procedure), creating new statutory defences for retail defamation and live broadcasting, and introducing a “serious harm” test for corporate claimants. Another notable change is giving the Circuit Court statutory jurisdiction to make orders requiring the identification of anonymous posters of alleged defamatory material.

At the same time, Ireland is also discussing how best to tackle SLAPPs (Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation). While the Act contains SLAPP-related provisions in the defamation context, the Government signalled that commencement of those measures is being aligned with a separate Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation Bill intended to extend safeguards beyond defamation into other civil and commercial proceedings.

What this proposal asks you to decide

This vote mirrors the public debate in Irish news coverage: should the priority be (1) making the new framework deliver real, practical protection for responsible public-interest journalism, (2) ensuring faster and more predictable access to justice for people whose reputations are unfairly harmed, or (3) focusing on enforcement tools such as unmasking anonymous posters? Your votes also indicate which specific reforms should be emphasised in implementation, guidance, and public communication in 2026.

Opzioni di voto

Vota le diverse opzioni proposte per trovare insieme la soluzione migliore.

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Make the public-interest journalism protections the headline priority

Focus

Emphasise the simplified defence of fair publication in the public interest, plus measures aimed at reducing delays and costs that Irish coverage links to a chilling effect on investigative reporting and public participation.

0 Ancora nessun voto
👍1 pro
Marino avatar
Pro icon
Irish reporting and government messaging frame the reforms as enhancing protection for responsible public-interest journalism and reducing the chilling effect of expensive, unpredictable defamation litigation (The Irish Times, 12 Feb 2026; TheJournal.ie, Feb 2026).
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Prioritise faster, more predictable access to justice for reputation claims

Focus

Emphasise judge-only trials in the High Court and alternative dispute resolution tools so that people whose reputations are unfairly attacked can obtain more consistent and predictable outcomes.

0 Ancora nessun voto
👍1 pro
Marino avatar
Pro icon
Irish coverage and the Government describe judge-only trials and ADR reforms as routes to reduce costs and delays and provide more consistent, predictable redress (TheJournal.ie, Feb 2026; Gov.ie, 25 Feb 2026).
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Prioritise tackling anonymous defamation online

Focus

Emphasise the new Circuit Court jurisdiction to order identification of anonymous posters of alleged defamatory material, as highlighted in reporting and the commencement order.

0 Ancora nessun voto
👍1 pro
Marino avatar
Pro icon
The reforms explicitly include a mechanism enabling court-ordered identification of anonymous posters of alleged defamatory material (The Irish Times, 12 Feb 2026; Gov.ie, 25 Feb 2026).

Judge-only trials for High Court defamation actions

Emphasise the move away from juries for High Court defamation actions in favour of judge-only trials, as part of the drive for greater consistency and predictability.

0 Ancora nessun voto

Public-interest defence (fair publication) simplification

Emphasise clearer protection for responsible public-interest journalism via changes to the fair publication / public interest defence.

0 Ancora nessun voto

Alternative dispute resolution and revised offer-of-amends

Emphasise settlement/ADR pathways (including the revised offer-of-amends procedure) to reduce costs and delays for all parties.

0 Ancora nessun voto

New statutory defences: retail defamation and live broadcasting

Emphasise the new defences for retail defamation scenarios and for live broadcasting, as commenced from 1 March 2026.

0 Ancora nessun voto

Corporate “serious harm” test

Emphasise the new serious-harm threshold for bodies corporate bringing defamation claims.

0 Ancora nessun voto

Orders to identify anonymous posters

Emphasise the Circuit Court’s statutory jurisdiction to order identification of anonymous posters of alleged defamatory material.

0 Ancora nessun voto

Fast-track wider SLAPP safeguards beyond defamation

Prioritise the separate Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation Bill approach described by the Government, aimed at extending safeguards beyond defamation into other civil and commercial proceedings and completing the EU Anti-SLAPP Directive transposition.

0 Ancora nessun voto
👍1 pro
Marino avatar
Pro icon
Government communications and Irish reporting present SLAPPs as a significant challenge to press freedom and set out a plan to align commencement with broader SLAPP legislation beyond defamation (Gov.ie, 25 Feb 2026; The Irish Times, 12 Feb 2026).

Keep SLAPP measures focused within defamation reform first

Prioritise embedding SLAPP-related safeguards as part of the defamation framework and communicating clearly how they will operate in practice before expanding to other legal areas.

0 Ancora nessun voto
👎1 contro
Marino avatar
Cons icon
The Government indicates Part 7 SLAPP-related provisions are being commenced in alignment with separate legislation, meaning timelines and scope depend on progress of the wider SLAPP Bill (Gov.ie, 25 Feb 2026).

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