The Guardian (USA)

Stunning Rupert Murdoch deposition leaves Fox News in a world of trouble

- Ed Pilkington

In his 71 years as a media executive, Rupert Murdoch has proved himself to be a grand master in the arts of survival. He has weathered bruising battles with British trade unions, the phone hacking scandal, countless ratings wars and a volatile private life, all the while growing his News Corp empire into global colossus.

It was against this seven-decade backdrop of seeming invincibil­ity that news of Murdoch’s deposition in the $1.6bn Dominion Voting Systems lawsuit against Fox News Networks and its parent company Fox Corp dropped like a bomb. Not only did he admit that he knew that Fox News hosts spread lies about the 2020 presidenti­al election being stolen from Donald Trump, but he confessed that he had allowed them to keep on doing so on air to millions of viewers.

To say that the 91-year-old’s statement astounded close Murdoch watchers would be an understate­ment. “I was shocked,” said Angelo Carusone, president of the watchdog Media Matters

for America. “It is stunning, as it not only exposes a lot about how Fox works, it opens them up to potentiall­y cascading litigation and liability.”

Fox News and its parent company now face escalating damage on two fronts: to its reputation as a journalism outlet that ostensibly pays lip service to truth and accuracy – and to the financial health of the operation. Media and legal experts told the Guardian that, partly as a result of his stunning testimony, Murdoch can now expect potentiall­y severe injury to both.

A former Republican strategist who co-founded the anti-Donald Trump Lincoln Project, Rick Wilson, said that the reputation­al damage was self-evident. “This is so profoundly cynical, and deeply corrosive to the role of the largest cable news network in the country,” Wilson remarked. “They admittedly engaged in fraud and lied to their audience.”

Wilson predicted that there would be fallout for Fox News in terms of defections from viewers angered by the admission as much as the substance of it. He said: “There’s been worry at Fox for some time now that they’re losing their iron grip on their audience. We are going to see a migration now of Fox News viewers to even further-right outlets like Newsmax and OANN.”

Brian Stelter, the former anchor of CNN’s media show Reliable Sources who is now a media and democracy fellow at Harvard’s Shorenstei­n Center, told the Guardian that Fox News would be cushioned by its financial success. “It’s a license to print money,” he said. “It is facing large potential damages which may be a major blow, but not a death blow.”

What would hurt most, Stelter suggested, would be the realizatio­n among the Fox News base that they had been served a dishonesty. “The most damning headlines to come so far are about the gap between what Fox News hosts say in public and private,” he said. “Even if a little of that seeps into the Fox bloodstrea­m, it still has an impact.”

In his deposition, Murdoch – whose newspaper holdings include the Sun in the UK and the Wall Street Journal – made an admission that could have dire consequenc­es, not only reputation­ally but also to the Dominion lawsuit on which a lot of money is riding.

Under heavy pressure from Dominion’s lawyers, he admitted that several Fox News hosts – Lou Dobbs, Maria Bartiromo, Jeanine Pirro and Sean Hannity – had endorsed the lie that the 2020 presidenti­al election was stolen from Trump and handed to Joe Biden.

“Some of our commentato­rs were endorsing it,” he said. “Yes. They endorsed.”

Murdoch tried to make a distinctio­n

 ?? ?? Rupert Murdoch’s admission that Fox News hosts knowingly ‘endorsed’ false claims of election fraud could help prove the network used ‘actual malice’. Photograph: Drew Angerer/ Getty Images
Rupert Murdoch’s admission that Fox News hosts knowingly ‘endorsed’ false claims of election fraud could help prove the network used ‘actual malice’. Photograph: Drew Angerer/ Getty Images
 ?? Photograph: Justin Lane/EPA ?? Sandy R, of New York, holds a sign while participat­ing in a protest organized by the group Rise and Resist outside Fox News headquarte­rs in New York on Tuesday.
Photograph: Justin Lane/EPA Sandy R, of New York, holds a sign while participat­ing in a protest organized by the group Rise and Resist outside Fox News headquarte­rs in New York on Tuesday.

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