Baltimore Sun

Murdoch: Fox stars ‘endorsed’ Trump’s false election claims

- By Randall Chase

DOVER, Del. — Fox Corp. chairman Rupert Murdoch acknowledg­ed that some Fox News commentato­rs endorsed the false allegation­s by former President Donald Trump and his allies that the 2020 presidenti­al election was stolen and that he didn’t step in to stop them from promoting the claims, according to excerpts of a deposition unsealed this week.

The claims and the company’s handling of them are at the heart of a defamation lawsuit against the cable news giant by Dominion Voting Systems.

The unsealed documents include excerpts from a deposition in which Murdoch was asked about whether he was aware that some of the network’s commentato­rs — Lou Dobbs, Maria Bartiromo, Sean Hannity and Jeanine Pirro — at times endorsed the false election claims.

Murdoch replied, “Yes. They endorsed.”

The Murdoch deposition is the latest filing in the defamation case to reveal concerns at the network over how it was handling Trump’s claims as its ratings plummeted after the network called Arizona for Joe Biden, angering Trump and his supporters.

An earlier filing showed a gulf between the stolen election narrative the network was airing in prime time and doubts about the claims raised by its stars behind the scenes.

The Dominion case is the latest example showing that those who were spreading false informatio­n about the 2020 election knew there was no evidence to support it. The now-disbanded House panel investigat­ing the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol disclosed that many of Trump’s top advisers repeatedly warned him that the allegation­s he was

making about fraud were false — and yet the president continued making the claims.

Murdoch urged in September 2020, weeks before the election, that Dobbs be fired because he was “an extremist,” according to Dominion’s court filing. Murdoch also said he thought it was “really bad” for former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani to be advising Trump because Giuliani’s “judgment was bad” and he was “an extreme partisan,” according to a deposition excerpt.

Murdoch was asked whether he could have requested that Powell and Giuliani not be put on the air: “I could have. But I didn’t,” he replied.

Denver-based Dominion Voting Systems, which sells electronic voting hardware and software, is suing both Fox News Network and parent company Fox Corp. for defamation. Dominion contends that some Fox News employees deliberate­ly amplified false claims by supporters of Trump that Dominion machines had changed votes in the 2020 election, and that Fox provided a platform for guests to make false and defamatory statements about the company.

Dominion attorneys contend that executives in the “chain of command”

at both Fox News and Fox Corp. knew the network was broadcasti­ng “known lies, had the power to stop it, but chose to let it continue. That was wrong, and for that, FC and FNN are both liable.”

Attorneys for Fox Corp. note in their filing that Murdoch also testified that he never discussed Dominion or voter fraud with any of the accused Fox News hosts. They say Dominion has produced “zero evidentiar­y support” for the claim that high-level executives at Fox Corp. had any role in creating or publishing the statements at issue.

Dominion’s contention that the company should be held liable because Murdoch might have had the power to step in and prevent the challenged statements from being aired, they said, “has no basis in defamation law, would obliterate the distinctio­n between corporate parents and subsidiari­es, and finds no support in the evidence.”

Meanwhile, Fox News attorneys note that when voting-technology companies denied the allegation­s being made by Trump and his surrogates, Fox News aired those denials, while some Fox News hosts offered protected opinion commentary about Trump’s allegation­s.

 ?? MARY ALTAFFER/AP 2019 ?? The deposition of Rupert Murdoch is the latest filing unsealed in the Dominion defamation case.
MARY ALTAFFER/AP 2019 The deposition of Rupert Murdoch is the latest filing unsealed in the Dominion defamation case.

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