Nov 19, 2025 |News,Press Releases
Speaking at the launch of its 2024 Annual Report the Chairperson of the Press Council of Ireland, Rory Montgomery called on the government to make the Defamation Amendment Bill law without further delay. Noting that the Bill has been promised for many years, and that it has already passed most stages of the legislative process, he added: “I implore legislators and the Minister for Justice to make every effort to bring this lengthy saga to a conclusion.”
The Press Council’s Code Committee is to embark on the first full review of its Code of Practice in 2026, and the Press Ombudsman, Susan McKay, has today launched a new Handbook which provides guidance to editors and members of the public on how she applies the Code of Practice to complaints. The Code of Practice is the set of ethical principles which newspapers, online publications and magazines agree to uphold when they join the Press Council.
Welcoming these developments, Mr Montgomery said: “The role of the Press Council is to promote and protect independent ethical journalism. If it is to function, it is essential that all members faithfully respect and act in accordance with the letter and spirit of the Code to which they have signed up.” He noted that the only sanction available to it was that members agreed to publish promptly all decisions by the Press Ombudsman, or, on appeal, by the Press Council, which went against them. “Any effort to reject or undermine these rules poses real dangers and will be vigorously resisted,” he said.
“In Ireland we are fortunate that both politicians and the public retain high levels of confidence in the honesty and fairness of the press,” he said. “This cannot be taken for granted – developments in the United States show that.”
Malachy Browne, director of the Visual Investigations team at The New York Times, also addressed the launch. He spoke about his team’s use of innovative sources and methods to investigate major news events in Ukraine, Gaza and elsewhere, including by using mobile phone videos and security camera footage, satellite images, plane and ship tracking data and A.I. tools.
Noting that independent journalism was under threat in the US and elsewhere, Mr Browne said:
“This kind of work shows how wrongdoing by authoritarian governments and others in power can be exposed by journalists who use the abundance of digital and visual evidence now available to them, by combining it with traditional reporting and sometimes with new tools that Artificial Intelligence offers.”
Press Ombudsman Susan McKay noted that journalists were also under threat and that this presented a fundamental challenge to the concept of press freedom.
“Threats of violence against journalists are often linked to denigration of the profession and defenders of press freedom,” she said. “Shockingly, the Committee to Protect Journalists noted that 2024 was the deadliest year for journalists since it began keeping records several decades ago, with 124 killed, nearly two thirds of them Palestinian journalists killed by Israeli forces in Gaza.”
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