Yorkshire Post

Fox loses libel battle over paedophile slur

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LAURENCE Fox has lost a High Court libel battle with two people he referred to as paedophile­s on social media.

The actor-turned-politician was sued by former Stonewall trustee Simon Blake and drag artist Crystal over a row on Twitter, now known as X, in October 2020.

Mr Fox called Mr Blake and the former RuPaul’s Drag Race contestant, whose real name is Colin Seymour, “paedophile­s” in an exchange about a decision by Sainsbury’s to mark Black History Month.

The Reclaim Party founder – who said at the time that he would boycott the supermarke­t – counter-sued the pair and broadcaste­r Nicola Thorp over tweets accusing him of racism.

In a ruling on Monday, High Court judge Mrs Justice Collins Rice ruled in favour of Mr Blake and Mr Seymour, dismissing Mr Fox’s counter-claims.

She said: “Mr Fox’s labelling of Mr Blake and Mr Seymour as paedophile­s was, on the evidence, probabilit­ies and facts of this case, seriously harmful, defamatory and baseless.

“The law affords few defences to defamation of this sort.

“Mr Fox did not attempt to show these allegation­s were true, and he was not able to bring himself on the facts within the terms of any other defence recognised in law.”

During a trial in London in November, Mr Fox was described as an alleged “intelligen­t racist with an agenda”.

Lorna Skinner KC, representi­ng Mr Blake, Mr Seymour and Ms Thorp, said the trio “honestly believed, and continue honestly to believe, that Mr Fox is a racist”.

In his written evidence for the case, Mr Seymour, a Canadian artist, said he had faced “overwhelmi­ng and distressin­g” abuse after Mr Fox’s tweet, adding that he felt less safe as a drag performer. Mr Blake, now chief executive of Mental Health First Aid England, said the incorrect suggestion that gay men are paedophile­s is “a trope as old as the hills”.

However, Patrick Green KC, representi­ng Mr Fox, told the court that neither Mr Blake nor Mr Seymour “has suffered any actual, realworld consequenc­es”.

Mr Fox told the court he was “horrified” when he saw he had been called a racist, which he later described as “a career-ending word and a reputation-destroying allegation”.

The actor said he faced a “significan­t decline” in the number and quality of roles he was offered.

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