Industry Minister Christian Porter has spoken to reporters in Canberra for the first time since taking on his new portfolio.Credit:Dominic Lorrimer
Mr Porter issuing the ABC for defamation over its reporting of allegations he raped a woman when they were both teenagers. He strenuously denies the allegations.
He had previously backed anational shake-up of defamation laws. The proposals include a “serious harm threshold” for claims,a single publication rule to ensure the one-year window for claims starts on the date an article is published to the internet,limits to payouts and a new public interest defence.
NSW,Victoria and South Australia have agreed to make these changes to come into effect from July,with the other states and territories to follow suit as soon as possible.
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Mr Porter said the new public interest defence was “largely speaking … a very useful reform” but his previously held view existing laws didn’t strike a perfect balance between public interest journalism and protecting individuals from reputational harm had become “more nuanced”.
“Once you have the experience inside the system,I think that you learn things that you don’t learn outside of the system,” he said on Wednesday.
Asked if he still believed defamation laws were unfair to traditional media compared with social media,he said his views on that aspect hadn’t changed.