Guest post by Martin McMahon
Ireland’s new journalism funding schemes are sold as a boost for pluralism, innovation, and public-interest reporting. Administered by Coimisiún na Meán, they allocate millions of euro across digital, print, radio, and podcast projects. On paper, it reads like a sensible intervention in a fragile media ecosystem.
But look closely at the rules, and a different pattern emerges. The key gate is eligibility. Funding is restricted to new projects only. That sounds neutral even encouraging innovation. In practice, it excludes the very outlets that have already done the hard work: building audiences slowly, developing trust over years, and producing consistent investigative or public-interest journalism.
A podcast that has run independently for five years, cultivated a loyal following, and held power to account is ineligible. A brand-new series launched by a national broadcaster or media chain qualifies automatically.
Continuity, under this design, becomes a liability.
Large media organisations are structurally advantaged by this model. They already own studios, employ producers, control distribution, and can redeploy salaried staff internally. For them, launching a “new” podcast can be little more than a branding exercise. The marginal cost is low, the compliance infrastructure is already in place, and the administrative burden of grant reporting is routine.
Independent podcasters operate under entirely different conditions. They build audiences incrementally. They rely on consistency rather than launch cycles. Their survival depends on longevity, not novelty. Yet the funding rules reward churn, launch, claim funding, conclude, rather than durable journalism.
The schemes also require applicants to be regulated entities or partnered with one. That effectively privileges organisations already inside formal regulatory structures, while freelancers and small independents must align themselves with established outlets to gain access. Platform-neutrality in theory becomes entity-selectivity in practice.
Compliance requirements, transcripts, accessibility deliverables, reporting metrics, public portal uploads are not inherently unreasonable. But they function as a moat. Large organisations absorb them as overhead. Smaller operators experience them as strain. The result is predictable: funding flows toward those already institutionally secure.
None of this requires bad faith. No editor receives instructions. No voice is formally silenced. Instead, the architecture of the scheme produces a steady, measurable effect. Incumbency is reinforced. Stability outside the system is penalised. Independence becomes harder to sustainwithout alignment.
This is not censorship in the traditional sense. It is something subtler: structural selection. Thedesign of eligibility rules quietly determines which media models are viable and which must struggle on the margins.
If the goal is pluralism, the question is unavoidable: does a “new-projects-only” model expand the range of independent voices or does it simply subsidise production activity within existing media hierarchies?
Public funding shapes markets. The shape it produces here deserves closer scrutiny.
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