The Guardian (USA)

James Murdoch criticises father's news outlets for climate crisis denial

- Jim Waterson Media editor

Rupert Murdoch’s son has strongly criticised his family’s news outlets for downplayin­g the impact of the climate crisis, as bushfires continue to burn in Australia.

James Murdoch and his wife, Kathryn, issued a rare joint statement directly criticisin­g his father’s businesses for their “ongoing denial” on the issue, which has been reflected in the family’s newspapers repeatedly casting doubt on the link between the climate emergency and the bushfires.

“Kathryn and James’s views on climate are well-establishe­d and their frustratio­n with some of the News Corp and Fox coverage of the topic is also well-known,” a spokespers­on for the couple said, confirming a report in the Daily Beast. “They are particular­ly disappoint­ed with the ongoing denial among the news outlets in Australia given obvious evidence to the contrary.”

James Murdoch was most recently the chief executive of the family’s 21st Century Fox entertainm­ent business, leaving when it merged with

Disney. He is making media investment­s through his own Lupa Systems company but continues to sit on the board of the family’s newspaper business, News Corp, which also owns the Times and the Sun.

The bushfires have focused attention on the likes of Andrew Bolt, a political commentato­r for News Corp’s Australian newspapers who is known for promoting the views of climate science deniers, and for his own attacks on “alarmists” and his derision of climate change science.

He also has a programme on the Murdoch-owned Sky News Australia, where he has criticised the “constant stream of propaganda” on the public broadcaste­r ABC about the role of the climate crisis in the bushfires.

“Politician­s who should do better are out there feeding the fear and misinforma­tion,” he said in a recent broadcast criticisin­g politician­s who said carbon emissions needed to be cut to avoid future fires. “As if that would stop a fire. You’d have to be a child like Greta Thunberg to believe that fairytale.”

US viewers have also heard commentary from Fox News presenters such as Laura Ingraham, who has said that “celebritie­s in the media have been pressing the narrative that the wildfires in Australia are caused by climate change”, before introducin­g guests who cast doubt on this interpreta­tion.

James Murdoch’s criticism sheds light on the family’s internal rifts, amid speculatio­n over his 88-year-old father’s succession plans. James’s older brother Lachlan is still actively involved in the family businesses as the USbased chairman and chief executive of the slimmed-down Fox Corporatio­n, which owns Fox News.

Last year, Rupert Murdoch told shareholde­rs “there are no climate change deniers” around his company and said his business was early to commit to “science-based targets to limit climate change” and was working

to reduce its climate emissions.

However, he has been publicly critical about the “alarmist” approach to the issue. In 2015, he used his Twitter account to describe himself as a “climate change sceptic not a denier”.

Lachlan Murdoch, Rupert Murdoch and News Corp have all separately donated millions of dollars to bushfire recovery efforts in recent days, although the Daily Beast claimed the donations were made after it requested comment about James Murdoch’s statement.

James Murdoch has a long history of advocacy on environmen­tal issues, inviting the former US vice-president Al Gore to present a version of his An Inconvenie­nt Truth slideshow to Fox executives in 2006. At the time he was the heir apparent to the media empire and had been trusted with running

BSkyB in London, where he would push environmen­tal issues to the fore, working on ways to reduce the power used by Sky’s set-top boxes and insisting on using hybrid taxis long before such things were standard corporate behaviour.

Since stepping back from day-today roles with the family business at the end of 2018, the multibilli­onaire has made clear he feels uncomforta­ble about much of Fox News’ output and was unsuccessf­ul in an attempt to cashin his stock completely and make a clean break with the company – an effort that failed after Lachlan declined to buy him out.

Kathryn Murdoch has already set out the couple’s vision, telling the New York Times last year that she was increasing­ly focused on the issue of global heating: “There hasn’t been a Republican answer on climate change. There’s just been denial and walking away from the problem. There needs to be one.”

She said she was particular­ly moved to act after seeing Al Gore’s speech at the Fox event in 2006: “I decided to switch everything I was doing. I wanted to be able to look my children in the eye and say ‘I did everything I could.’”

 ?? Photograph: Joel Ryan/Invision/AP ?? James and Kathryn Murdoch have issued a statement criticisin­g Rupert Murdoch’s firms for ‘ongoing denial’ on the climate crisis.
Photograph: Joel Ryan/Invision/AP James and Kathryn Murdoch have issued a statement criticisin­g Rupert Murdoch’s firms for ‘ongoing denial’ on the climate crisis.

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