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Bill

Bill

SB 1181

RELATING TO HAWAIIAN LANGUAGE IMMERSION EDUCATION.

2025 Regular Session Introduced by Mike Gabbard

Expedited dismissal and fee-shifting protections for lawsuits targeting public participation, with narrow exceptions and prospective effect for actions after Jan 1, 2026.

Carried over to 2026 Regular Session.
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Bill Summary · SB 1181

Summary — SB 1181 (Public Expression Protection) — Public Act 104‑0431

Status: Enacted (Public Act 104‑0431). Governor approved August 21, 2025.
Primary sponsors: Sen. Steve Stadelman; Chief House sponsor: Rep. Daniel Didech. Cosponsors include Tracy Katz Muhl and Jennifer Gong‑Gershowitz.

Purpose

SB 1181 (the "Uniform Public Expression Protection Act" as incorporated into the Citizen Participation Act) strengthens procedural and substantive protections against Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation (SLAPPs). Its stated aim is to protect and encourage citizen participation in government, the free press, and other constitutional rights of petition, speech and association by creating an expedited mechanism to dismiss suits that target such participation and by providing fee‑shifting remedies.

Key provisions and changes

  • Amends the Citizen Participation Act (735 ILCS 110) by modifying Sections 5, 15, and 25 and adding new Sections 17 and 32.
  • Expanded scope: applies to civil causes of action (including cases in federal court under supplemental/diversity jurisdiction) that arise from:
    • communications in legislative, executive, judicial, administrative or other governmental proceedings;
    • communications on issues under consideration or review in those proceedings; or
    • the exercise of rights guaranteed by the U.S. or Illinois Constitutions on matters of public concern.
  • Exemptions: Act does not apply to suits
    • against governmental units or their employees/agents acting in an official capacity;
    • brought by a governmental unit or its agents acting officially to enforce law to protect against an imminent public‑health or safety threat; or
    • against persons primarily engaged in selling or leasing goods/services when the claim arises from communications related to that sale/lease (with an express exclusion that "goods or services" does not include expressive/artistic works).
  • Special motion for expedited relief: a defendant may file a special motion to dismiss or strike (in whole or in part) not later than 60 days after being served (later if good cause). The bill directs expedited hearings and rulings — hearings must be held and rulings issued within specified 60‑day windows unless extended for limited discovery or other good cause.
  • Automatic stay: filing the special motion generally stays other proceedings between the moving and responding parties (including discovery and pending hearings). Courts may permit limited discovery for specified, necessary information. Motions for attorney’s fees/costs are not stayed.
  • Fee‑shifting: a prevailing moving party must be awarded reasonable attorneys’ fees and costs. A prevailing respondent can recover fees/costs only if the court finds the special motion was frivolous or filed solely to delay.
  • Prospectivity: changes made by this amendatory Act apply only to actions commenced on or after January 1, 2026 (Section 32). The Act takes effect on becoming law (Governor approved Aug 21, 2025).

Who is affected

  • Defendants sued for speech, petitioning, or related public‑participation activities will have an accelerated, protective procedure to seek dismissal and recover fees.
  • Plaintiffs bringing claims tied to those communications may face earlier dismissal, stays of discovery, and potential exposure to defendants’ fee claims if the special motion succeeds.
  • Government enforcement actions and ordinary commercial sale/lease disputes are largely excluded.

Procedural/timing notes

  • Special motion deadlines, stay triggers, and expedited hearing/ruling timelines are central to the bill’s operation. Limited discovery is allowed only where necessary to establish burdens under the Act.
  • Although the Act became law August 21, 2025, its substantive changes apply prospectively to suits filed on/after January 1, 2026.

This Act broadens procedural tools for defendants in cases alleging harms tied to public participation and seeks to deter meritless, retaliatory litigation that chills speech and civic engagement.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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