and he undoubtedly knows more about it than I do, even if he wishes he didn't:
The battle for libel reform has only begun
Yesterday's ruling on my article is welcome. But the law remains a serious hazard for journalists
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Second, merely deciding the potential defences and meaning of my article has cost both parties a total of £200,000. Such minor legal technicalities should not be so expensive. Thankfully, it will be the chiropractors who largely meet the bill for this, but they will dispute some of my legal costs, and I could easily be left £20,000 out of pocket. And there is an associated loss of income, because I devoted most of the last two years to the case.
The total cost of a libel trial can easily run to £1m, so a journalist threatened with libel has to be prepared to risk losing everything. It might be a matter of bluff by the claimant, but any journalist who carries on with this poker game has to be either unhinged or have a healthy bank balance. Personally, I am doubly blessed because my bank balance is OK and I am slightly unhinged.
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There are numerous other problems with English libel law – such as the fact that journalists are guilty until proven innocent, the lack of a robust statutory public interest defence, and London's reputation as a libel tourism destination
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Our politicians must act. The Lib Dems already have libel reform in their manifesto. After Jack Straw's encouraging comments last week, it seems that libel reform will be in Labour's. And after comments by Henry Bellingham, of the shadow justice team, it would be shameful if libel reform were not in the Tories'.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/libertycentral/2010/apr/02/simon-singh-help-me-win-libel-reformI don't think it's a 'sea change', so much as a straw in the wind - senior judges are agreeing the current situation and verdicts aren't acceptable, and that will help political will to change the laws.
There are proposals from Labour, but one change already going through parliament has been held up:
An earlier government attempt to reduce the costs of libel cases – reducing the success fees that lawyers can charge in defamation cases from 100% to 10% – has been held up in the lords by a "motion of regret" tabled by the former Commons speaker Lord Martin. The Ministry of Justice is planning to make parliamentary time available to prevent the order being killed off before the election.
Martin, the only Speaker of the Commons to be chucked out in the past few hundred years, because he was too much on the side of the dodgy MPs claiming expenses they weren't entitled to, got made a lord, and is now doing his best to ruin the country on behalf of powerful interests in the House of Lords. They never should have given him a peerage.