“Last year the paper made very serious and false accusations against me, basked on unchecked claims on social media,” Murray said.
Journalist Douglas Murray won a libel claim against Guardian Media Group on Tuesday over a 2024 article that falsely accused him of “supporting violent racist attacks” during nationwide protests against mass migration in the United Kingdom last year. The conservative writer announced his legal victory in a post on X, blasting the left-wing publication for its “lazy journalism.”
“Legal update: Today I won a major libel claim against Guardian Media / Observer (@guradian) for its lazy journalism,” Murray wrote. “Last year the paper made very serious and false accusations against me, basked on unchecked claims on social media.”
On August 11, 2024, The Observer, The Guardian’s Sunday edition, published a report written by columnist Kenan Malik that attributed Murray’s critical comments he made about mass illegal migration following the fatal stabbing of young girls at a Taylor Swift-themed dance class by a Muslim immigrant. Murray made the comments six months before the civil turmoil, but Malik mistakenly claimed he made them during the riots.
Malik used an old interview between Murray and former Deputy Australian Prime Minister John Anderson about Israel and Islam, quoting the comments in his piece and erroneously stating they were made during the then-current upheaval in the UK.
The Guardian corrected Malik’s article prior to publishing it online and was forced to issue a correction in The Obeserver’s print edition the following week, Mediaite reported.
Murray further stated on X, “Baseless accusations have to be stopped before other careless ‘journalists’ take fake news from the internet and repeat such damaging allegations.”
During the hearing, Guardian Media Group representatives read a statement that acknowledged the error and falsity of the allegations, as well as their agreement to pay Murray damages and legal fees. It’s unclear how much money the publication has agreed to pay the journalist but Murray described the damages he has been awarded as “substantial.”
Murray is an associate editor at The Spectator and a columnist at the New York Post.