Chattanooga Times Free Press

THE BIG HOLE IN FOX NEWS SETTLEMENT

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When news of a possible settlement between Dominion Voting Systems and Fox News surfaced on Sunday night, pleas from concerned citizens popped up on social media: Don’t settle this lawsuit, Dominion. Put all the evidence before a jury. Drag Fox News hosts and executives to the witness stand. Grill them on their deceptive programmin­g.

So, the news Tuesday afternoon that the two parties had settled Dominion’s $1.6 billion defamation suit over election disinforma­tion for $787.5 million will disappoint those who longed for a more visceral comeuppanc­e for Fox News. That’s understand­able, considerin­g that Fox News has littered the public square with lies and half-baked stories — essentiall­y mini-Dominions — for 26-plus years.

The size of the payout, however, speaks to both the journalist­ic atrocities and the reams of internal correspond­ence that Dominion pried from Fox News during the pretrial maneuverin­g. And yet: It all feels a bit empty.

Justin Nelson, a top attorney for Dominion, sounded a triumphant tone in a statement following the announceme­nt. “The truth matters,” said Nelson. “Lies have consequenc­es. Over two years ago, a torrent of lies swept Dominion and election officials across America into an alternativ­e universe of conspiracy theories.” The settlement, he added, “represents vindicatio­n and accountabi­lity.”

That accountabi­lity came via volume. A Dominion document filed with the court on Tuesday listed 7,021 trial exhibits, including transcript­s of offending programs, internal correspond­ence among producers expressing doubts about the stuff their bosses were broadcasti­ng, scolding remarks about people committed to doing actual journalism, and a lot more. A good portion of the material relates to the actions of former Fox News host Lou Dobbs, a 30-plus-year veteran of cable news. He figures to be among the winners in this settlement, considerin­g that he won’t have to see his propaganda exposed again in what promised to be saturation coverage.

Tucker Carlson, Sean Hannity, Jeanine Pirro and Rupert Murdoch are among the others whose spring outlook just got a little brighter.

In its statement, Fox News demonstrat­ed that not even a court record bulging with evidence of perfidy is enough to shame the organizati­on into genuine contrition. “We are pleased to have reached a settlement of our dispute with Dominion Voting Systems. We acknowledg­e the Court’s rulings finding certain claims about Dominion to be false. This settlement reflects FOX’s continued commitment to the highest journalist­ic standards.”

After Nelson and other speakers finished addressing the media, the Erik Wemple Blog and other reporters asked whether the settlement required Fox News to publish any retraction­s or apologies. The lawyers turned and left without answering those questions. The Post’s Jeremy Barr reported that the network will not have to air any retraction­s or apologies pursuant to the settlement agreement. Which is to say, the resolution requires a great deal of something that Fox News has in wheelbarro­ws (money) and very little of something it has in teaspoons (editorial integrity). That’s where the emptiness comes in. Documents made public in the course of the litigation showed that Fox News’s relationsh­ip with its audience tortures the ideal of an America that runs on a shared set of facts. The full depravity of the network’s 2020 election coverage will never have to be disclosed to viewers on the only cable-news outlet they trust.

The slam-dunk nature of the evidence in Dominion Voting Systems v. Fox News stirred expectatio­ns — a bankrupt Fox News; abject apologies from the likes of Carlson and Murdoch — that a single lawsuit may never have been able to deliver.

“This litigation cannot solve all problems,” said Nelson.

 ?? ?? Erik Wemple
Erik Wemple

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