The provisions of the new “hate crime” law come into effect today after Minister for Justice Helen McEntee signed a commencement order, the Department of Justice has said.
The Criminal Justice (Hate Offences) Act 2024 was passed by the Oireachtas in October and introduces harsher sentences for crimes where hatred against certain categories of people is demonstrated.
The law seeks to protect individuals targeted due to their race, colour, nationality, religion, national or ethnic origin (including Travellers), descent, gender, sex characteristics, sexual orientation, or disability.
Gender is defined within the legislation as the gender of a person “or the gender which a person expresses as the person’s preferred gender or with which the person identifies and includes transgender and a gender other than those of male and female.”
Existing offences covered by the legislation include criminal damage, public order offences, assault, coercion, threatening to kill or injure, and the distribution or public display of threatening or abusive material. These crimes now become hate crimes, with harsher sentences, if hatred towards a protected group can be proven.
If the hatred element is not proven in court, the remaining aspect of the charge can still lead to a conviction.
Additionally, the law provides that if, during the trial of any other offence, evidence of a hate crime element emerges, the judge will treat that as an aggravating factor and record the conviction as a hate crime.
The new law was passed after the Government chose not to proceed with controversial “hate speech” provisions contained in the original Bill.
These excised provisions would have made the “communication” of material deemed capable of inciting “hatred” punishable by up to five years in prison and mere “possession” of such material punishable by up to two years.
However, the 1989 Prohibition of Incitement to Hatred Act remains in force. This legislation targets speech intended and likely to cause physical violence, requiring the prosecution to demonstrate that the accused intended to incite hatred. What was so chilling about the Criminal Justice (Incitement to Violence or Hatred and Hate Offences) Bill as written was that it went further on both counts – effectively lowering the criminality threshold from “incitement to violence” to “subjectively offensive”, while at the same time holding defendants liable even if they didn’t intend to stir up hatred.
In practical terms, this could have led to scenarios where individuals claiming offence—such as accusations of “homophobia” against a Christian street preacher or “transphobia” against a gender-critical feminist – might trigger investigations. Even if these cases never reached the courts, the investigatory process itself – the knock on the door, the officers of the law pushing past you into your living room, the confiscation of your phone and laptop, the formal interview at the police station – could have had a chilling effect on free speech.
In a sinister echo of Ireland’s Committee on Evil Literature, which was established in 1926 – and the Censorship of Publications Act which followed and prohibited the sale and distribution of “unwholesome literature” – the bill also contains provisions that make it a crime, punishable by up to two years in jail, to “prepare or possess” material likely to incite hatred.
“Possession” in this context could simply mean having a dodgy meme or cartoon saved on your phone, or a copy of Mein Kampf on your laptop. These and other, similar cultural artefacts would certainly have fallen within the ambit of the criminal law, since the bill as written – e.g., Sections 10(1) and 10(3) – reversed the usual burden of proof, with the burden of proof resting with the accused to demonstrate the material was just for personal use.
Any attempt to frustrate the authorities in their pursuit of “unwholesome literature” wouldn’t have got tech-savvy Irish citizens very far since the legislation includes a provision that makes it a crime punishable by a fine of up to €5,000 or a year in jail to refuse to give the Garda a password to any electronic device that you own.
Despite the removal of the hate speech provisions, the legislation faced opposition from Sinn Féin and others. It was ultimately passed with 78 votes in favour and 52 against.
Minister McEntee, speaking before the vote, emphasised that the law “creates specific offences based on an aggravated offence model to ensure those who target victims because of their association with particular identity characteristics are identified as perpetrators of hate crime.”
She added: “Perpetrators of hate crime send a message to our minorities and our most vulnerable communities that they are not safe, that they do not have a right to be who they are and that they do not belong in Irish society. The new law sends the counter-message that hate-motivated attacks will not be tolerated, perpetrators will be punished, and marginalised and targeted communities will be protected.”
In his contribution, Sinn Féin’s Matt Carthy raised concerns about the definition of gender within the legislation, stating: “Most people do not understand what this means precisely.”
Mick Barry, of People Before Profit, expressed unease about how the reference in the law to a person demonstrating hatred at the time of an alleged offence might be used. “A Garda will just have to say that an accused person was heard using hate speech while committing another offence,” he said. “This could be taken as evidence and used to convict. It could also be used to stigmatise political movements and activists.”
Responding to these concerns, Minister McEntee said that the law focuses on situations where “a crime has already been committed,” meaning the demonstration of hatred must be accompanied by another offence.
On the definition of gender, she claimed: “This is not about somebody’s legal definition. If somebody is being attacked, they are not being asked if they have a gender certificate. They are not being asked if this is their gender or what their gender is. They are being attacked because of who they are. The approach we have taken here is deliberately inclusive to ensure we are adequately capturing the individuals and communities we know are targeted by these crimes.”