China Daily

Roger Ailes, ex-Fox News chief, dies

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NEWYORK—RogerAiles, who built Fox News into a politicall­y powerful cable giantthath­elpedredef­ineUS television news, has died, the network announced.

The Fox co-founder, who was also a consultant to Republican presidents, was ousted from the network last year under the cloud of a series of sexual harassment allegation­s.

The network’s hosts struggledt­oholdbackt­earsasthey read a statement from Ailes’ wife Elizabeth announcing his death at the age of 77.

A longtime confident of media titan Rupert Murdoch, Ailes was a central figure in the conservati­ve US political movement.

He resigned in July after a sexual harassment lawsuit from former Fox news host Gretchen Carlson.

His wife’s statement, first published on the conservati­ve Drudge Report, said: “I am profoundly sad and heartbroke­n to report that my husband, Roger Ailes, passed away this morning.”

Ailes, she said, “was a loving husband to me, to his son Zachary, and a loyal friend to many. He was also a patriot, profoundly grateful to live in a country that gave him so much opportunit­y to work hard, to rise — and to give back.”

Under the leadership of Ailes, Fox became the most widely watched cable news channel, home to key conservati­ve political commentato­rs and drawing an audience distinct from rivals CNN and MSNBC.

Ailes served as a consultant to presidents from Richard Nixon to Ronald Reagan to George H.W. Bush and according to some analysts helped revive conservati­ve politics in the United States.

“Apart from the presidents he served, he was arguably thesinglem­ostimporta­ntfigure in the creation of modern conservati­sm,” David Greenberg, a Rutgers University political scientist, wrote in an essay for Politico last year.

 ?? RON EDMONDS / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? George H.W. Bush, then US vice-president, gets some advice from his media adviser, Roger Ailes (right), in New Orleans, Louisiana, in 1988. Fox News said on Thursday that Ailes has died.
RON EDMONDS / ASSOCIATED PRESS George H.W. Bush, then US vice-president, gets some advice from his media adviser, Roger Ailes (right), in New Orleans, Louisiana, in 1988. Fox News said on Thursday that Ailes has died.

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