As Fox News faces trial this month in the $1.6 billion defamation lawsuit brought by Dominion Voting Systems, which so far has proven that Fox knowingly made false statements about the company following the 2020 presidential election, legal experts writing for Just Security argued that a Fox defeat in the lawsuit would be good for First Amendment protections of the news media.
Laurence Tribe, Joshua Stanton, and E. Danya Perry wrote on April 11 that remarks released by Dominion “make it clear that Fox News knew that conspiracy theories about the 2020 election were flatly false, yet still engaged in months of broadcasting such falsehoods.” Counter to Fox’s argument that its lies are protected by the First Amendment and one of Trump’s attorneys general, William Barr, claiming that a defeat for Fox would be a “major blow to media freedoms generally,” the legal experts explain that a jury finding against Fox would actually be healthy for the press:
For the press to function – and to serve its absolutely crucial role of reinforcing democracy by nurturing an educated public and helping the nation’s citizens make informed decisions when they vote or make their views known to those serving in government positions – it cannot be hamstrung by the fear of a lawsuit any time good-faith reporting turns out to have been inaccurate. Nor can the relaxed standard of mere negligence suffice to encourage the robust reporting and wide-open public debate democracy demands when the targets of critique are public figures like the sheriff in Sullivan or even public companies like Dominion.
But that does not mean the media must be given free rein to spew whatever falsehoods those who profit from it believe will drive up their numbers. Such falsehoods do as much to discredit the media and undercut its vital democratic function as would too relaxed a standard of liability. Sullivan’s standard – requiring proof of deliberate or reckless factual falsehood – achieves those goals admirably: good-faith reporters are protected, while those who knowingly air baseless and dangerous conspiracy theories are liable when those lies cause real-world harm. And where that harm is substantial, it is only reasonable that monetary damages must be paid to compensate for the resulting injury. In this case, those damages are potentially astronomical, perhaps starting at Dominion’s claimed $1.6 billion in compensatory damages, which can be multiplied several times over in punitive damages.
A jury will now have to decide these issues – whether Fox News acted with the requisite knowledge of falsity or disregard for truth and how much harm it potentially inflicted. A jury finding that Fox News is on the hook for 10-figure sum in this case would be both a fair outcome and a victory for democracy – and for the continued vitality of the appropriately balanced approach to the First Amendment set forth in Sullivan.