Rupert Murdoch testified that Fox News hosts
‘endorsed’ stolen election narrative
Network owner also admitted in $1.6bn defamation
lawsuit deposition that Trump’s claims were ‘damaging to everybody’
Dani
Anguiano in Los Angeles
@dani_anguiano
Tue 28 Feb
2023 02.00 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/media/2023/feb/27/rupert-murdoch-deposition-dominion-lawsuit-fox-news
Newly
released court documents reveal that Rupert Murdoch, the billionaire owner of
Fox News, acknowledged under oath that several Fox News hosts endorsed Donald
Trump’s lie that the 2020 election was stolen from him.
The mogul
made the admission during a deposition in the $1.6bn defamation lawsuit brought
against the network by the voting machine company Dominion Voting Systems,
which has accused Fox News and its parent company, Fox Corporation, of
maligning its reputation. In his deposition, Murdoch said that the hosts Maria
Bartiromo, Lou Dobbs, Sean Hannity and Jeanine Pirro “endorsed” the false
narrative promoted by Trump.
“I would
have liked us to be stronger in denouncing it in hindsight,” Murdoch said in
the deposition, the New York Times reported on Monday.
In previous
court filings, attorneys for Dominion have argued that Fox News hosts ridiculed
Trump’s false claims of a “stolen election” while promoting those lies on
television. While Sean Hannity pushed that narrative on his prime-time show, he
allegedly wrote that Trump was “acting like an insane person”.
Even
Murdoch himself dismissed Trump’s claims, describing the former president’s
obsession with proving the election was stolen as “terrible stuff damaging
everybody”.
Murdoch
acknowledged in his deposition that he could have ordered the network not to
platform Trump lawyers such as Sidney Powell and Rudy Giuliani on its programs:
“I could have. But I didn’t,” he said.
Dominion’s
defamation case is being described as a “landmark”. A Harvard law professor
recently told the Guardian he had “never seen a defamation case with such
overwhelming proof that the defendant admitted in writing that it was making up
fake information in order to increase its viewership and its revenues”.
The Fox
hosts were also privately critical of members of Trump’s team, including Sidney
Powell, an attorney who claimed that Dominion’s machines had changed votes cast
for Trump to Joe Biden. In a deposition, Hannity said: “That whole narrative
that Sidney was pushing, I did not believe it for one second”.
Still, the
network continued to give coverage to proponents of the election fraud
narrative as it feared upsetting its viewers. In a conversation about the
network’s coverage of the issue on 5 January 2020 – a day before rioters
stormed the US Capitol in an attempt to stop the election from being certified
- Suzanne Scott, the Fox News media chief executive, and Murdoch debated
whether Fox hosts should acknowledge Trump’s defeat and admit that Biden won.
“We need to be careful about using the shows and pissing off the viewers,”
Scott told Murdoch.
Dominion
sued Fox News and parent company Fox Corporation in March 2021 and November
2021 in Delaware superior court, alleging the cable TV network amplified false
claims that Dominion voting machines were used to rig the 2020 election against
Trump, a Republican who lost to Democratic rival Biden. Dominion’s motion for summary
judgment was replete with emails and statements in which Murdoch and other top
Fox executives say the claims made about Dominion on air were false – part of
the voting machine company’s effort to prove the network either knew the
statements it aired were false or recklessly disregarded their accuracy.
In its own
filing made public on Monday, Fox argued that its coverage of statements by
Trump and his lawyers were inherently newsworthy and that Dominion’s “extreme”
interpretation of defamation law would “stop the media in its tracks”.
Reuters
reported that a Fox spokesperson said that Dominion’s view of defamation law
“would prevent journalists from basic reporting”.
A trial is
scheduled to begin in mid-April.
Reuters contributed reporting
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