The Macomb Daily

Fox News libel defense at odds with top Republican presidenti­al foes

- By David Bauder

Fox News is on an unlikely collision course with two leading contenders for the Republican presidenti­al nomination over the rights of journalist­s.

In defending itself against a massive defamation lawsuit over how it covered false claims surroundin­g the 2020 presidenti­al election, the network is relying on a nearly 60-yearold Supreme Court ruling that makes it difficult to successful­ly sue media organizati­ons for libel.

Former President Donald Trump and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, two favorites of many Fox News viewers, have advocated for the court to revisit the standard, which is considered the foundation­al case in American defamation law.

“It is ironic that Fox is relying on a landmark case that was designed to help the news media play the watchdog role in a democracy and is under attack by Gov. DeSantis, Donald Trump and other figures who have been untethered in their attacks on journalist­s as enemies of the people,” said Jane Hall, a communicat­ion professor at American University.

Eye-catching evidence has emerged from court filings in recent weeks revealing a split screen between what Fox was portraying to its viewers about the false claims of election fraud and what hosts and executives were saying about them behind the scenes. “Sydney Powell is lying,” Fox News host Tucker Carlson said in a text to a producer, referencin­g one of the attorneys pushing the claims for Trump.

In an email a few weeks after the 2020 election, Fox Corp. Chairman Rupert Murdoch described a news conference featuring Powell and former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani, another attorney who pushed the election lies: “Really crazy stuff. And damaging.”

Aside from the revelation­s about Fox’s inner workings, the outcome could have broad implicatio­ns for media organizati­ons because of how they and the courts have come to rely on the libel law Fox is using as a shield.

In its $1.6 billion lawsuit, voting machine maker Dominion Voting Systems argues that Fox repeatedly aired allegation­s that the company helped rig the general election against Trump despite many at the news organizati­on privately believing the claims were false.

Fox says the law allows it to air such claims if they are newsworthy.

In a 1964 decision in a case involving The New York Times, the U.S. Supreme Court greatly limited the ability of public officials to sue for defamation. It ruled that news outlets are protected against a libel judgment unless it can be proven that they published with “actual malice” — knowing that something was false or acting with a “reckless disregard” to whether it was true or not.

In one example of how the law was applied, editors at the Times acknowledg­ed last year that an editorial mistakenly linked former Republican vice presidenti­al nominee Sarah Palin’s rhetoric to an Arizona mass shooting. Palin lost her libel suit because she couldn’t prove the newspaper erred without concern for the truth.

Some advocates for free speech worry that the Dominion-Fox lawsuit ultimately could give a conservati­ve Supreme Court a chance to revisit the standard set in the case, known as New York Times Co. v. Sullivan. While the case has been among the court’s most durable precedents, the newly empowered conservati­ve majority has indicated a willingnes­s to challenge what had been considered settled law — as it did last year in overturnin­g abortion rights.

Two Supreme Court justices, Clarence Thomas and Neil Gorsuch, have publicly expressed interest in giving the precedent another look.

In dissenting from a 2021 decision not to take up a libel case, Gorsuch wrote that what began in 1964 as a decision to tolerate occasional errors to allow robust reporting “has evolved into an ironclad subsidy for the publicatio­n of falsehoods by any means and on a scale previously unimaginab­le.” He said the modern media landscape is much different today, and suggested it was less careful.

“My wish is that the parties would settle and this case would go away,” said Jane Kirtley, director of the Silha Center for the Study of Media Ethics and the Law at the University of Minnesota. “I don’t see any good coming out of it.”

A perceived strength in Dominion’s case also worries some supporters of the press.

Dominion says Fox was, in effect, torn between the truth that Joe Biden legitimate­ly won the race and pleasing viewers who wanted to believe Trump’s lies. In deposition­s released last week, Murdoch argued that Fox as a network did not endorse the claims, but that some of its commentato­rs — Maria Bartiromo, Lou Dobbs, Jeanine Pirro and Sean Hannity — at times did.

Murdoch was among several at Fox to say privately they didn’t believe the claims made by Trump and his allies that widespread fraud cost him reelection. In his deposition, Murdoch said he could have prevented guests who were spouting conspiraci­es from going on the air, but didn’t.

“One of the defenses is that even false speech about public figures is protected so long as it is believed by the speaker,” First Amendment attorney Floyd Abrams said. “But no one at Fox appears ready to say that he or she did believe the assertions ... and there now appears to be substantia­l evidence that no one there at Fox did so. It’s a major blow.”

Fox’s entire prime-time lineup privately disparaged Trump lawyer Sidney Powell, according to court papers. Laura Ingraham, in a text to Carlson, called her a “nut.” In a deposition, Hannity said he did not believe her theories “for one second.” Neverthele­ss, Powell was interviewe­d on Fox 11 times between Nov. 8 and Dec. 10, 2020, according to court papers.

 ?? TED SHAFFREY — ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Images of Fox News personalit­ies, from left, Tucker Carlson, Sean Hannity, Laura Ingraham, Maria Bartiromo, Stuart Varney, Neil Cavuto and Charles Payne appear outside News Corporatio­n headquarte­rs in New York on July 31, 2021. In defending itself against a massive defamation lawsuit over how Fox covered false claims surroundin­g the 2020presid­ential election, the network is relying on a 1964Suprem­e Court ruling that makes it difficult to successful­ly sue media organizati­ons for libel.
TED SHAFFREY — ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Images of Fox News personalit­ies, from left, Tucker Carlson, Sean Hannity, Laura Ingraham, Maria Bartiromo, Stuart Varney, Neil Cavuto and Charles Payne appear outside News Corporatio­n headquarte­rs in New York on July 31, 2021. In defending itself against a massive defamation lawsuit over how Fox covered false claims surroundin­g the 2020presid­ential election, the network is relying on a 1964Suprem­e Court ruling that makes it difficult to successful­ly sue media organizati­ons for libel.

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