The failure of Arron Banks’s case against her is a vindication of the reporter’s work

The victory of the freelance journalist and Guardian and Observer contributor Carole Cadwalladr over the businessman Arron Banks, in the libel case he brought against her, is a vindication of Ms Cadwalladr’s work and her supporters. It is also a victory for the wider cause of press freedom. The judgment handed down on Monday by Mrs Justice Steyn pointed to “proper allowance for editorial judgment” and the “special importance of expression in the political sphere”. It asserted that free expression of this nature is at the core of the concept of democracy.

Ms Cadwalladr’s defence at trial – that she believed statements she made in a Ted talk in April 2019, and in a related tweet, were in the public interest – was partly successful. But Mr Banks’s suit also failed on the grounds that he failed to establish that “serious harm” to his reputation was caused, or was likely to be caused, by Ms Cadwalladr’s talk during the second time period under consideration, from April 2020. It is highly significant, and good news for media organisations, that the court decided Ms Cadwalladr’s talk amounted to “political expression of high importance, and great public interest (in the strictest sense), not only in this country but worldwide”.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Trump and Biden avoid each other as they commemorate 9/11

The president spoke at a ceremony in Pennsylvania at the site of…

UK economic recovery slowed to 2.1% in August – business live

Rolling coverage of the latest economic and financial news after UK growth…

Public Enemy’s Chuck D: ‘Trump is a half-baked celebrity real estate hypocrite’

As Fight the Power is reworked for the age of Black Lives…

Another day of panic and bad improv has England shambling into the abyss | Jonathan Liew

Pyrrhic victories and pointless triumphs were all the tourists had to hold…