The Oklahoman

Dominion voting case exposes fear at Fox News

Ratings decline around fraud claims prompts panic at network

- David Bauder

NEW YORK – A court filing in a lawsuit against Fox News lays bare a panic at the network that it had alienated its viewers and damaged its brand by not lining up with President Donald Trump’s false claims that he had won the 2020 presidenti­al election.

That worry – a real one, judging by Fox’s ratings in the election’s aftermath – played a key role in Fox not setting the record straight about unfounded fraud claims, the network’s accuser contends.

“It’s remarkable how weak ratings make good journalist­s do bad things,” the filing quotes Fox Washington news executive Bill Sammon as saying.

The details were included in a trove of private communicat­ions unearthed by lawyers and contained in a redacted brief filed Thursday by Dominion Voting Systems. Dominion claims in a $1.6billion lawsuit that Fox aired allegation­s that Dominion had doctored the vote against Trump, even as it knew that was untrue. Fox says it was doing its job as journalist­s by airing the accusation­s made by Trump and his allies.

Fox’s internal troubles began with a correct call: Declaring on election night 2020 that Democrat Joe Biden had beaten Trump in Arizona. The declaratio­n, coming ahead of other news organizati­ons, infuriated the president and his fans.

The backlash was noted in internal emails. “Holy cow, our audience is mad at the network,” said one, quoted by Dominion.

Five days after the election, Fox News founder Rupert Murdoch communicat­ed to Suzanne Scott, Fox News CEO, that the channel was “getting creamed by CNN. Guess our viewers don’t want to watch it,” according to court papers.

Fox News tumbled from first to third in the news network ratings between the Nov. 3, 2020 election and Biden’s inaugurati­on on Jan. 20, 2021, according to the Nielsen company. Meanwhile, thousands of Fox viewers flocked to the more conservati­ve Newsmax, where prime-time viewership shot from 58,000 the week before the election to 568,000 the week after.

The change shook the foundation­s of a network that had consistent­ly led in the news ratings for the better part of two decades. Fox roared back into the lead by tacking more sharply to the right after Biden took office. But in the immediate aftermath of the election, there was genuine worry at its New York headquarte­rs.

“Do the executives understand how much credibilit­y and trust we’ve lost with our audience?” Fox primetime star Tucker Carlson wrote to his producer, according to Dominion’s brief. “We’re playing with fire, for real … an alternativ­e like newsmax could be devastatin­g to us.”

Dominion contends that Fox executives made the decision to push false narratives to entice their audience back, and points to claims made by Trump allies like attorney Sidney Powell on programs hosted by Maria Bartiromo and Lou Dobbs.

On Nov. 9, Fox News Channel’s Neil Cavuto cut away from a news conference held by Trump aide Kayleigh McEnany when she began to air unsubstant­iated allegation­s. A Fox executive later complained that Cavuto was damaging the network’s brand.

The court filings also detailed two instances where Fox News reporters were attacked internally for tweeting fact checks.

In one, reporter Jacqui Heinrich tweeted that there was no evidence any voting system deleted, lost or changed votes.

“Please get her fired,” Carlson messaged fellow anchor Sean Hannity, saying Heinrich was hurting the company, according to Dominion’s filing. Heinrich’s tweet was later deleted, the court papers said.

Fox said many of its specific responses will come in a document that Superior Court Judge Eric Davis in Delaware ordered sealed until Feb.27.

Fox said Dominion had mischaract­erized the record and cherry-picked quotes stripped of key context.

 ?? ALICIA DEVINE/TALLAHASSE­E DEMOCRAT FILE ?? Dominion contends that Fox News executives made the decision to push false election narratives.
ALICIA DEVINE/TALLAHASSE­E DEMOCRAT FILE Dominion contends that Fox News executives made the decision to push false election narratives.

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