Miami Herald

DeSantis leads roundtable discussion about making it easier to sue media companies

- BY EMILY L. MAHONEY AND KIRBY WILSON emahoney@tampabay.com kwilson@tampabay.com

Gov. Ron DeSantis raised the possibilit­y Tuesday of passing legislatio­n that could lower the bar for prominent people to successful­ly sue news outlets for defamation.

In a roundtable discussion that featured complaints about the unfair “narrative” of the news media, DeSantis sat behind a desk similar to one of a news anchor with the backdrop of the word “Truth” on a screen. DeSantis spoke with six panelists, including attorneys who litigate libel cases, libertaria­n journalist Michael Moynihan and Nicholas Sandmann, a conservati­ve activist who has spoken extensivel­y about his mistreatme­nt by mainstream media outlets.

While the governor and the panelists weighed policy options, the event concluded without DeSantis announcing any specific bill or action to be taken, only telling viewers to “stay tuned.”

Since he first ran for governor in 2018, DeSantis has kept traditiona­l news outlets at a distance, preferring instead to grant interviews to conservati­ve broadcaste­rs while framing the general media as a political opponent. His reelection team included clips in campaign ads of him sparring with reporters at news conference­s. More recently, DeSantis’ lawyers have argued in court that he possesses executive privilege that is similar to a U.S. president and allows him to shield records of his choosing from the public.

On Tuesday, DeSantis mentioned a 2021 “60 Minutes” story that focused on Publix’s campaign donations to the governor ahead

of the grocery chain’s getting the right to distribute COVID-19 vaccines in

Palm Beach County. DeSantis has previously railed against that report, saying clips were selectivel­y edited and the story was inaccurate. At the time, he held an official event at the Capitol to dispute it.

DeSantis said Tuesday that any potential legislatio­n would not be for his benefit. Instead, he and other panelists implied that private citizens are often the victims of inaccurate reporting.

“They come after me — and they do do a lot of slander — but I fight back. I have a platform to fight back. … I got thick skin,” he said during Tuesday’s Hialeah Gardens event. “But you have some of these other folks who are just run-of-the-mill citizens, their only possible way of recourse would be to be able to bring an

action [in court].”

Although the governor did not offer legislativ­e details, it’s not the first time his office has considered a challenge to the current legal understand­ing of the First Amendment. Before the 2022 legislativ­e session, his office shared with a lawmaker a draft of a bill that would have, among other things, required the courts to presume statements by anonymous sources are false in a defamation claim.

That draft bill, whose existence was first reported by the Orlando Sentinel, was never filed.

DeSantis seemed to hint Tuesday that he would push for restrictio­ns on the publicatio­n of stories supported by anonymous sources.

“Has it been adjudicate­d that if you’re dealing with anonymous sources, has anyone tried to say that that should be an inference of actual malice? Would that work?” DeSantis asked panelist and attorney Libby Locke.

The “actual malice” standard originated in the 1964 Supreme Court case New York Times Co. v. Sullivan. That case made it especially difficult for prominent plaintiffs to successful­ly sue news outlets for defamation.

In that case, a Montgomery, Alabama, publicsafe­ty commission­er named L.B. Sullivan sued the Times for publishing an ad asking for contributi­ons to Martin Luther King Jr.’s legal defense. The ad contained factual errors.

The court held that prominent people seeking to sue news organizati­ons had to prove that the outlet knew that the published statements were false before publishing them or that the outlet acted with reckless disregard for the truth. Simply publishing false informatio­n was not enough to show actual malice, the court held.

DeSantis asked the panel whether current Supreme Court justices would be “receptive” to an argument against that precedent. Two justices, Neil Gorsuch and Clarence Thomas, have said they would support revisiting that case. In

2021, Thomas, whom DeSantis once called the “greatest living justice,” said the Supreme Court had erred when it created the “actual malice” standard.

“This court’s pronouncem­ent that the First Amendment requires public figures to establish actual malice bears ‘no relation to the text, history or structure of the Constituti­on,’ ” Thomas wrote.

Of the various libel suits mentioned by the panelists, Sandmann’s was arguably the most highprofil­e. In 2019, he attended an anti-abortion rally at which he was video-recorded standing near Native American protesters. Some news coverage initially portrayed him as the aggressor, a claim that was later refuted.

 ?? MARTA LAVANDIER AP, file ?? Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis has kept traditiona­l news outlets at a distance while framing them as political opponents.
MARTA LAVANDIER AP, file Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis has kept traditiona­l news outlets at a distance while framing them as political opponents.

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