The Guardian (USA)

‘Lachlan gets fired the day Rupert dies’: Murdoch biography stokes succession rumors

- Martin Pengelly in New York

It’s long been thought that the succession plan for Lachlan Murdoch to take control of Fox Corporatio­n and News Corp was set in stone for when his 91year-old father, Rupert Murdoch dies.

But a new book is stoking speculatio­n that Murdoch’s oldest son might be ousted in a Succession-style feud with his family, in a move with potentiall­y huge ramificati­ons for Fox News, the TV network that dominates US rightwing politics, according to a new biography of the Anglo-Australian media heir.

The author, Paddy Manning, writes: “A Wall Street analyst who has covered the Murdoch business for decades and is completely au fait with the breakdown in the relationsh­ip between the brothers [Lachlan and James Murdoch], volunteers off the record that it would be ‘fair to assume Lachlan gets fired the day Rupert dies’.”

The Successor: The High-Stakes Life of Lachlan Murdoch will be published in the US on 15 November and is out in Australia now.

Manning is an Australian journalist who has written for outlets including the Guardian. His previous books include biographie­s of Malcolm Turnbull, the former Australian prime minister, and Nathan Tinkler, a mining entreprene­ur.

The title of Manning’s biography of Lachlan Murdoch echoes that of the TV hit Succession, the HBO story of an ageing media tycoon, played by Brian Cox, and his family’s struggles to succeed him.

Lachlan Murdoch, 51 and Rupert Murdoch’s oldest son, has led the family media businesses with his father since 2014.

James Murdoch, 49, resigned from the board of News Corp in July 2020. He said then: “My resignatio­n is due to disagreeme­nts over certain editorial content published by the company’s news outlets and certain other strategic decisions.”

The younger Murdoch has since emerged as a backer of progressiv­e and environmen­tal concerns, in Manning’s words, “ploughing millions into the defeat of [Donald] Trump, climate activism, and other political causes”.

But Lachlan Murdoch has remained in a position of near-unrivaled power in rightwing media and politics, overseeing US properties including the New York Post, the Wall Street Journal and Fox News, the TV network with a nearsymbio­tic relationsh­ip with Trump and the Republican party.

Though Manning reports a potentiall­y surprising $1,500 donation Lachlan Murdoch made in 2020 to Pete Buttigieg, then a Democratic presidenti­al hopeful, now the Biden administra­tion’s transporta­tion secretary, he also reports that “realising the potential for embarrassm­ent, [Murdoch] asked for it back and was duly refunded”.

The Successor covers the older Murdoch son’s life from childhood through youthful business ventures including investment in Australian rugby league, to his departure from his father’s businesses in 2005 and return nearly a decade later.

Lachlan Murdoch has become a champion of the rightward march of Fox News, which inspired his brother’s resignatio­n from the News Corp board. As described by Manning, the older Murdoch son has for example remained supportive of Tucker Carlson, the primetime host and provocateu­r who regularly espouses far-right views.

But all four grownup Murdoch children – Lachlan and James, their sister Elisabeth Murdoch and their halfsister Prudence MacLeod – will be key players in the eventual succession.

“In a plausible scenario,” Manning writes, “after Rupert has passed and his shares are dispersed among the four adult children, the three on the other side of Lachlan could choose to manifest control over all of the Murdoch businesses, and to do it in a way that enhances democracie­s around the world rather than underminin­g them.

“In this scenario, the role of Fox News has become so controvers­ial inside the family that control of the trust is no longer just about profit and loss at the Murdoch properties. In one view that has currency among at least some of the Murdoch children, it is in the long-term interests for democracie­s around the world for there to be four shareholde­rs in the family trust who are active owners in the business.”

Last month, Rupert Murdoch was reported to be seeking to merge News Corp, which owns newspapers outside the US including the Times, the Sun and the Australian, with Fox, which includes Fox News and Fox Sports, which shows prized NFL games.

A former Murdoch senior executive told the Guardian then the plan had been “in the works for two years. I give it a 75% chance it will happen, 25% that it will be blocked. It’s all about Lachlan. Rupert is in his 90s – this is his last deal, it’s succession planning.”

Discussing the belief that “Lachlan gets fired the day Rupert dies”, Manning writes that it is “a formula for instabilit­y and intra-family feuds that must weigh on the minds of directors of both Fox and News Corporatio­n as they contemplat­e the mortality of the 91-year-old founder, although they deny it.

“A source close to members of the Murdoch family questions the extent of succession planning by the boards of Fox or News Corporatio­n and whether discussion­s among the directors can be genuinely independen­t, as corporate governance experts would like.

“‘Rupert has total control over all the companies as long as he is alive,’ the source says. ‘It’s an unrealisti­c expectatio­n that the boards of those companies are going to use their voices to manifest independen­ce. What is their succession plan? What if something happens to Lachlan?’”

 ?? Photograph: Dan Steinberg/AP ?? Rupert Murdoch, center, and his sons, Lachlan, left, and James Murdoch in Beverly Hills in 2014.
Photograph: Dan Steinberg/AP Rupert Murdoch, center, and his sons, Lachlan, left, and James Murdoch in Beverly Hills in 2014.

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