Jordan

Quick facts

Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan, State Media Monitor 2026 cycle

Official name
Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan
System of government
Constitutional monarchy
Head of State
King Abdullah II
Prime Minister
Jafar Hassan (designated 15 September 2024; cabinet sworn in 18 September 2024)
Lower House composition
Islamic Action Front largest opposition bloc, 31 of 138 seats (September 2024 elections)
Cycle Cabinet continuity
August 2025 reshuffle did not affect Government Communication or Interior portfolios
Minister of Government Communication
Mohammad Momani
Minister of the Interior
Mazen Farraya
National Service reactivation (announcement)
Crown Prince Al Hussein bin Abdullah II
National Service detail briefing
18 August 2025; Brig. Gen. Mustafa Hiyari with government spokesperson
First conscription training phase
1 February 2026; 6,000 recruits born in 2007
Regional security context (cycle)
2026 Iran-Israel/US regional escalation; Jordanian air-defence interceptions over Jordanian airspace
RSF 2026 ranking
142nd of 180 (modest improvement from 147th in 2025)
RSF 2026 score
39.33 (up from 35.25 in 2025)
Press-freedom environment
Remained highly restrictive despite modest RSF improvement
Principal cybercrime instrument
2023 Cybercrime Law (remained in force throughout cycle)
Cycle Cybercrime Law cases
Hiba Abu Taha (cases under 2023 Cybercrime Law); Ahmad Hassan al-Zoubi (2022 social-media post case; released January 2025)
May 2025 outlet blocking
12 online news outlets (including Voice of Jordan, Raseef22, Middle East Eye)
Press-freedom red lines
Self-censorship around security establishment, royal institutions, religion and other sensitive political topics
National digital-policy lead
Ministry of Digital Economy and Entrepreneurship
National AI Strategy and Implementation Plan 2023-2027
Addresses AI capacity-building, infrastructure, public-sector technology
Digital Transformation Strategy 2026-2028
Addresses digital transformation, data governance, public-sector technology
Media-specific generative-AI governance
No framework identified during the 2025/26 cycle
SMM-mapped media entities (2026 cycle)
7 (3 State-Controlled + 4 Captured Public)
Classification changes (2025/26 cycle)
None

Press-freedom indicators

Jordan 2026 cycle

RSF 2026 ranking
142 / 180
▲ from 147th in 2025
RSF 2026 score
39.33
▲ from 35.25 in 2025
May 2025 blockings
12
online news outlets

Modest RSF improvement did not translate into a less restrictive environment: the 2023 Cybercrime Law remained in force, with prosecutions involving journalists and commentators continuing through the cycle.

The Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan is a constitutional monarchy under King Abdullah II, with executive authority exercised through a Cabinet headed by Prime Minister Jafar Hassan, whose government was approved and sworn in on 18 September 2024 following his 15 September 2024 designation as Prime Minister. The September 2024 parliamentary elections returned a Lower House of Representatives in which the Islamic Action Front emerged as the largest opposition bloc with 31 of 138 seats, and the August 2025 cabinet reshuffle did not affect the Government Communication or Interior portfolios, held respectively by Mohammad Momani and Mazen Farraya. The 2025/26 cycle was shaped by a markedly elevated public profile for the Jordanian Armed Forces: the reactivation of the National Service Programme was announced by Crown Prince Al Hussein bin Abdullah II and detailed by Brig. Gen. Mustafa Hiyari with the government spokesperson on 18 August 2025; the first 2026 training phase began on 1 February 2026 with 6,000 recruits born in 2007; and Jordanian air-defence interceptions over Jordanian airspace took place during the 2026 Iran-Israel/US regional escalation.

Media environment

Jordan’s media environment remained highly restrictive during the 2025/26 cycle despite a modest improvement in its 2026 World Press Freedom Index ranking, with Reporters Without Borders placing Jordan 142nd of 180 countries with a score of 39.33, up from 147th and 35.25 in 2025. The 2023 Cybercrime Law remained in force and was used in cases involving Jordanian journalists and commentators including Hiba Abu Taha, with cases under the 2023 Cybercrime Law, and Ahmad Hassan al-Zoubi, who was imprisoned in a cybercrime case linked to a 2022 social-media post and released in January 2025. Freedom House documented the May 2025 blocking of twelve online news outlets including Voice of Jordan, Raseef22 and Middle East Eye, while press-freedom monitors continue to identify self-censorship around the security establishment, royal institutions, religion and other sensitive political topics as a structural feature of the Jordanian media environment. Jordan’s national digital-policy framework is led by the Ministry of Digital Economy and Entrepreneurship and includes the National AI Strategy and Implementation Plan 2023-2027 and the Digital Transformation Strategy 2026-2028, but no media-specific generative-AI governance framework was identified during the cycle.

State media mapped by SMM

The 2026 SMM dataset for Jordan covers seven SMM-mapped media entities across the State-Controlled (SC) and Captured Public (CaPu) categories of the State Media Matrix typology. Three SC entities anchor the principal state broadcasting and news-agency architecture: the Jordan Radio and Television Corporation, established under Law No. 35 of 2000; Al-Mamlaka TV, established under Regulation No. 53 of 2015, with its Board appointed by Royal Decree; and the Jordan News Agency (Petra), operating under Jordan News Agency Law No. 11 of 2009, with a Board chaired by Minister of Government Communication Mohammad Momani and a 2026 General Budget Department allocation of approximately JOD 3.435 million. Four CaPu entities exhibit structurally distinct architectures within a single country cluster: Jordan Press & Publishing Company (Ad-Dustour), under indirect Social Security-linked Rama Investment shareholding; Jordan Press Foundation (Al Ra’i, The Jordan Times), under direct Social Security Investment Fund majority shareholding of around 55 per cent; Al Raya Media Group, affiliated with the Jordanian Armed Forces-Arab Army and operating within the JAF military-media structure headed by the Military Media Directorate, formerly the Moral Guidance Department; and Amen FM (Public Security Radio), under the Public Security Directorate of the Ministry of Interior. No SMM-tracked Jordan entity underwent a classification change during the 2025/26 cycle.

Typology distribution

Jordan 2026 cycle, 7 SMM-mapped media entities

State-Controlled (SC)
3
  • • JRTV
  • • Al-Mamlaka TV
  • • Petra
Captured Public (CaPu)
4
  • • JPPC (Ad-Dustour)
  • • JPF (Al Ra’i, Jordan Times)
  • • Al Raya Media Group
  • • Amen FM

No SMM-tracked Jordan entity underwent a classification change during the 2025/26 cycle. See the State Media Matrix typology for category definitions.

CaPu architectures

Four structurally distinct CaPu architectures within the Jordan 2026 cluster

JPPC (Ad-Dustour)
Indirect shareholding
Rama Investment (SS-linked vehicle, just under 30%)
JPF (Al Ra’i, Jordan Times)
Direct majority shareholding
Social Security Investment Fund (~55%)
Al Raya Media Group
Military institutional control
JAF Military Media Directorate (renamed 2022)
Amen FM
Police institutional control
Public Security Directorate (Ministry of Interior)
Entity
Architecture vector
State-link mechanism

Media profiles