Fact checking claims by Fox News about crime rates and migration in Ireland
In the TV piece, Fox alleged that Dublin has gone from being one of the safest cities in Europe in 2003, to one of the most dangerous in 2024.
To support this claim, Fox showed a screenshot of an article published in 2024 by the Irish newspaper Sunday World titled "Dublin ranks among the top ten most dangerous major cities in Europe, survey claims."
However, when investigating the claim, EuroVerify found that the article uses data sourced from a survey carried out by online betting platform the OLBG (Online Betting Guide).
"The main reason why this research was conducted was to reveal the best cities in Europe for nightlife, and as part of the study, safety scores for each city were analysed", a spokesperson for the OLBG told EuroVerify.
The reliability of the survey is questionable given that OLBG sourced its data from Numbeo, a platform which relies on crowd-sourced data and warns there is no "assurance that any statement on the website is correct or precise."
Meanwhile, the Global Peace Index, which is produced by the Australian-based NGO, the Institute for Economics & Peace, has consistently ranked Ireland as one of the safest countries in the world, placing it in second position in 2025.
Rising crime in Ireland
During the piece, the channel aired two graphs side by side on screen — on the left one showing rising immigration in Ireland, while the one on the right displayed figures for rising crime — in turn implying that there is a causal link between migration and crime.
Contacted by EuroVerify, Ireland's Department of Justice said that it was not "aware of any credible evidence that would suggest a causal link between immigration and crime in Ireland."
"Over the past 10 years there has been a large increase in the numbers of non-Irish people employed in Ireland. They bring essential skills and experience that are much needed in the current labour market. There has been no corresponding change in crime levels over this period," the spokesperson added.
Ireland experienced unprecedented levels of immigration in the year leading up to April 2024, with a population increase of 98,700, which amounts to positive net migration of 79,300, meaning that more people have been arriving in Ireland, than those leaving.
Fox News also stated that robberies had increased by 18% and violent crime by 10%. However, these selected crime and robbery statistics are misleading because the country's statistics office does not classify crimes under the broad labels of "robbery" and "violent crime."
More specifically, the 18% figure cited by Fox appears to refer to an increase in "robbery, Extortion & Hijacking" from the first quarter of 2023 to the first quarter of 2024, while the 10% figures refer to an increase in crime incidents involving "weapons and explosives offences."
What the segment fails to mention is that other crimes decreased between the first quarter of 2023 and the same period of 2024, with homicide and sexual offences dropping by 8% and 12% respectively.
How disinformation is fuelling hate crimes in Ireland
Over the course of the summer, a spate of brutal attacks predominantly targeting South Asian migrants occurred in Ireland.
"A series of highly publicised, very violent attacks targeting members of Ireland's Indian community have spread fear. A lot of the attacks were initiated by misinformation and disinformation, for instance through lies spread about crime", Teresa Buczkowsa, the CEO of Immigrant Council of Ireland told Euronews.
On 19 July, an Indian man was attacked by a group of men in southwest Dublin, who beat him and accused the man of inappropriate behaviour with children.
While Irish authorities stated that the allegations against him were unfounded, footage of the aftermath of the attack spread online according to Irish broadcast RTE, leading the footage to gain traction as anti-immigration accounts reshared it.
This led the country's Indian embassy to issue a safety warning to its citizens following what it qualified as "an increase in the instances of physical attacks reported against Indian citizens in Ireland recently."
"Everything changed after the Dublin riot in 2023, when we saw a huge level of violence erupting in Dublin city centre against migrants and that really kind of was the starting point for the physical violence we are seeing today", said Buczkowsa.
"The shifting narrative we are hearing in politics and false allegations that migrants are raising crime rates are leaking into everyday conversations and opinions, which is a worrying trend", added Buczkowsa.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Hill
a few seconds ago
- The Hill
All eyes on the Trump-Putin Alaska summit
The two world leaders met for about three hours alongside senior Russian and U.S. officials, including Secretary of State Marco Rubio and special envoy Steve Witkoff, and two Russian aides – shifting from a previously planned one-on-one summit between Trump and Putin. Afterward, they took to podiums in front of a blue backdrop that read 'Pursuing Peace,' speaking to reporters in a highly anticipated joint appearance. Putin began speaking first, in Russian, telling the audience that negotiations were held in a ' respectful, constructive and mutually respectful atmosphere,' and that he agrees that the security of Ukraine should be ensured. ' I agree with Trump that the security of Ukraine must be secured, and of course, we are ready to work on that,' he said, adding that he hopes that the agreement reached between Washington and Moscow 'will help us bring closer that goal and will pave the path towards peace in Ukraine.' Putin also proposed Moscow as the next location for any future meeting with Trump. 'That's an interesting one, I'll get a little heat on that one,' Trump replied. 'But I could see it possibly happening.' When it was his turn to speak, Trump spent a portion of his time lamenting that he has 'always had a fantastic relationship' with Putin, but that it was impeded by investigations during his first term into Russia's interference in the 2016 U.S. presidential election. 'We had many, many tough meetings, good meetings. We were interfered with by the Russia, Russia, Russia hoax. I've made it a little bit tougher to deal with, but he understood it,' Trump said. He also offered little as to whether anything was agreed to or not in the talks, noting that ' there's no deal until there's a deal.' 'I will say that I believe we had a very productive meeting. There were many, many points that we agreed on, most of them, I would say, a couple of big ones that we haven't quite gotten there. We've made some headway. So, there's no deal until there's a deal,' the president said. Ahead of the meeting, Trump said that he has a 'good idea' of what Ukraine would like to see from the summit. ' It's not for me to negotiate for Ukraine, but I think I have a pretty good idea what they'd like to see, and what's good and what's not good,' the president said during his interview with Fox News' 'Special Report' with host Bret Baier. But Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, who was excluded from the talks, said Russia has no intention to end the war soon. 'The war continues, and it is precisely because there is neither an order nor even a signal that Moscow is preparing to end this war. On the day of negotiations, they are killing as well. That speaks volumes,' he said in a video posted to X.


Forbes
29 minutes ago
- Forbes
$372K In Lobbying And A Push For Family Rights From An Unlikely Ally
Some companies engage in lobbying that has little to do with the needs of their customers. Often, the focus is on protecting profit margins, preserving market share, or avoiding costly operational changes. That can mean pushing to loosen safety or transparency rules, resisting reforms that raise production costs, or reshaping legal definitions to fit what the company already offers. Publicly, these brands may speak the language of social responsibility; privately, their policy positions preserve loopholes, delay progress, or keep competitors out. Every so often, a company does the opposite. It uses its influence to advocate for customer needs, not just its bottom line. This is rare. And in 2025, one of the most surprising examples came from a brand better known for dating culture than family policy. Grindr Enters the Policy Arena With Purpose Grindr, widely recognized as a dating app, stepped into the policy arena with purpose. In the second quarter of 2025, the company spent $372,000 on lobbying for expanded access to surrogacy and IVF, tax deductibility for related expenses, and updated legal definitions of reproductive healthcare. CEO George Arison, who has two children through surrogacy, had a personal stake in the work. That spring, Grindr brought its lobbying in-house, creating a government affairs team to lead the charge. Its priorities: make it easier and more affordable for same-sex couples to build families through surrogacy and IVF, expand the tax code's definition of reproductive healthcare, and support HIV prevention and treatment programs. In December 2024, Grindr announced a $300,000 family-building benefit spread over five years and available to each eligible employee. Administered by Carrot Fertility, the program covers 80% of costs for adoption, surrogacy, and fertility treatments. It also includes hormonal healthcare such as menopause care and low testosterone treatment. Paired with 20 weeks of paid parental leave and a hybrid work model, it's one of the most comprehensive packages in the tech sector. Lobbying Backed by Bipartisan Engagement A company spokesperson told Forbes: 'We have been working hard to educate lawmakers on the issue on a bipartisan basis, and have also directly engaged the Trump Administration at the cabinet level to encourage regulatory updates that could allow for a broadened definition of eligible reproductive healthcare expenses and empower businesses to support all families – LGBTQ+ couples, individuals with health conditions, and other hopeful parents in creating the families of their dreams.' The gap is significant. U.S. tax law still largely blocks same-sex couples from deducting surrogacy expenses, and even IVF costs linked to surrogacy often don't qualify. Most employer health plans exclude surrogacy entirely even if they cover some IVF treatments. Some explicitly exclude any surrogacy-related medical care. The result: even 'family-friendly' employers can't close the gap without creating their own benefit programs. Redefining a 'Family-Friendly' Company Since January, a quarter of eligible Grindr employees have enrolled. One employee and his husband are expecting their first child. For Arison, the effort is personal and policy-driven: 'I'm very lucky to have two kids through surrogacy… I believe that small, targeted changes in public policy – such as making all surrogacy expenses, which are ultimately medical expenses, tax deductible – could make it far easier and more affordable for gay men to have children. In the meantime, I wanted Grindr to play a role by leading on what we offer employees and advance such policies on a larger scale.' By combining lived experience, robust internal benefits, and strategic lobbying alongside direct advocacy, Grindr challenges the idea that family-building benefits belong to a certain kind of company. It shows how corporate influence can widen the path to parenthood, making it accessible to more people, in more ways, than most would imagine.


Fox News
29 minutes ago
- Fox News
Mike Pompeo advises Americans not to 'overread' this part of Trump and Putin's meeting
Former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo evaluates President Donald Trump's remarks about his meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin.