The Guardian (USA)

Fox and friends confront billion-dollar US lawsuits over election fraud claims

- Adam Gabbatt in New York

In the months following the 2020 US presidenti­al election, rightwing TV news in America was a wild west, an apparently lawless free-for-all where conspiracy theories about voting machines, ballot-stuffed suitcases and dead Venezuelan leaders were repeated to viewers around the clock.

There seemed to be little consequenc­e for peddling the most outrageous ideas on primetime.

But now, unfortunat­ely for Fox News, One America News Network (OAN), and Newsmax, it turns out that this brave, new world wasn’t free from legal jurisdicti­on – with the three networks now facing billion-dollar lawsuits as a result of their baseless accusation­s.

In June, Dominion Voting Systems, which provided voting machines to 28 states, was given the go-ahead to sue Fox Corp, the parent company of Fox News, in a case that could draw Rupert Murdoch and his son, Lachlan, into the spotlight.

In the $1.6bn lawsuit, Dominion accuses Fox Corp, and the Murdochs specifical­ly, of allowing Fox News to amplify false claims that the voting company had rigged the election for Joe Biden.

Fox Corp had attempted to have the suit dismissed, but a Delaware judge said Dominion had shown adequate evidence for the suit to proceed. Dominion is already suing Fox News, as well as OAN and Newsmax.

“These allegation­s support a reasonable inference that Rupert and Lachlan Murdoch either knew Dominion had not manipulate­d the election or at least recklessly disregarde­d the truth when they allegedly caused Fox News to propagate its claims about Dominion,” Judge Eric Davis said.

Davis’s ruling is not a guarantee that Fox will be found liable. But the judge made it clear that this isn’t some frivolous attempt by Dominion – and media and legal experts think Fox could be in real trouble.

“Dominion has a very strong case against Fox News – and against OAN for that matter,” said Ciara Torres-Spelliscy, a professor who teaches constituti­onal law at Stetson University and a fellow at the Brennan Center for Justice, a nonpartisa­n law and policy institute.

“The reason Dominion is suing is because Fox and other rightwing news outlets repeated vicious lies that Dominion’s voting machines stole the 2020 election from Trump for Biden. But all of these conspiracy theories about Dominion’s machines were just pure bunk, and Fox as a news organizati­on should have known that and not given this aspect of the big lie a megaphone.

“What’s particular­ly bad for Fox is [that] Dominion asked them to stop and correct the record in real time, and Fox persisted in spreading misreprese­ntations about the voting machine company.”

Indeed, in his ruling, Davis noted that “other newspapers under Rupert Murdoch’s control, including the Wall Street Journal and New York Post, condemned President Trump’s claims and urged him to concede defeat”.

In a statement, a Fox News spokespers­on said: “Limiting the ability of the press to report freely on the American election process stands in stark contrast to the liberties on which this nation was founded, and we are confident we will prevail in this case, as the first amendment is the foundation of our democracy and freedom of the press must be protected.”

A potential precedent in the Dominion v Fox case could be found in a recent case involving Sarah Palin, who sued the New York Times. Palin claimed the newspaper maliciousl­y damaged her reputation by erroneousl­y linking her campaign rhetoric to a mass shooting. In February a jury sided with the Times, finding that a Times employee had not acted with “actual malice” against a public figure or with “reckless disregard” for the truth – the criteria necessary to prove defamation.

But the Times victory shouldn’t give Fox too much hope, said Torres-Spellliscy.

“In the Palin case, the New York Times quickly corrected the mistake about Palin that had been added while an article was edited,” Torres-Spelliscy said.

“By contrast Fox News kept up the bad behavior and repeatedly told myths about Dominion’s voting machines. This is likely why judges in several of these Dominion defamation cases have not dismissed them.”

Dominion isn’t the only company seeking damages from Fox and its contempora­ries.

Smartmatic, an election software company which provided voting software to precisely one county in the 2020 election but found itself subjected to claims that it was founded “for the specific purpose of fixing elections” by associates of Hugo Chavez, the former president of Venezuela who died in 2013, is suing Fox Corp, Fox News and associates for $2.7bn.

Still, Fox News is the most-watched and arguably most influentia­l cable news channel in the US, and is probably too big to fail.

But that isn’t the case for the small

er rightwing networks OAN and Newsmax, which are also both being sued by Dominion and Smartmatic – in June, a Delaware judge refused Newsmax’s motion to have the Dominion case dismissed, but did not weigh on whether Newsmax was innocent or guilty.

“I think OAN is going to be wiped out from the litigation costs. Forget about any judgment,” said Angelo Carusone, president and chief executive of Media Matters for America, which monitors rightwing media.

Carusone pointed out that OAN is already struggling to survive, after it was dropped by the DirecTV cable company – which was reportedly responsibl­e for 90% of OAN’s revenue – in April.

“We’ve started seeing, already, them scaling back programmin­g, they’ve been laying off staff, they’ve been cutting back the number of programs. So it’s pretty clear that they don’t have sufficient resources to weather a protracted litigation.”

Newsmax, which is still carried by DirecTV, is “relatively cash flush” in comparison to OAN, Carusone said – enough to survive a trial, if not to pay the billions of dollars Dominion and Smartmatic are seeking.

In a statement, Newsmax said it had “reported on allegation­s made by President Trump and his surrogates and at no time did we report these allegation­s were true. We also reported on critics of the Trump claims”.

It added: “The Dominion suit is an assault on a free press and endangers all press outlets if it were to prevail.”

OAN did not respond to a request for comment.

As for Fox, the most significan­t thing could be if the Murdochs are subjected to discovery – where they and Fox could be forced to hand over documents potentiall­y including communicat­ions data – as part of the legal process, Carusone said.

Text messages obtained by the January 6 commission have already revealed that there was communicat­ion between Fox News hosts and White House officials regarding the insurrecti­on – and it seems unlikely that is the only thing that was discussed.

“I think once you start to pull the discovery material, what you’re going to find is there was a lot of communicat­ion between the Trump people both internally and externally about pushing very specific lies and narratives,” Carusone said.

While Fox is more financiall­y comfortabl­e than OAN and NewsMax, it is not invulnerab­le. Fox News is due to renegotiat­e its contracts with cable providers at the end of this year, and Carusone said cable companies could use the lawsuit to drive down prices.

The Dominion and Smartmatic cases are likely to drag on for some time, and it remains to be seen how Fox News, OAN and NewsMax will react.

As for the news channels’ conspirato­rial claims of election fraud, at least that is one thing that has already been settled.

The courts, the Department of justice, election officials have investigat­ed and dismissed the accusation­s, as has the US Department of Homeland Security’s Cybersecur­ity and Infrastruc­ture Security Agency.

“The November 3 election was the most secure in American history,” the agency said in a statement in 2020.

“While we know there are many unfounded claims and opportunit­ies for misinforma­tion about the process of our elections, we can assure you we have the utmost confidence in the security and integrity of our elections, and you should too.”

William Barr, Trump’s attorney general, put it in rather less sophistica­ted terms.

The claims of election interferen­ce, Barr told the January 6 committee, were “bullshit”.

 ?? Photograph: Sarah Yenesel/EPA ?? Protesters outside the Fox News headquarte­rs in New York. Media and legal experts believe Fox could be in trouble in the Dominion case.
Photograph: Sarah Yenesel/EPA Protesters outside the Fox News headquarte­rs in New York. Media and legal experts believe Fox could be in trouble in the Dominion case.

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