Angry Fox News chief said fact-checks of Trump’s
election lies ‘bad for business’
Suzanne Scott wrote in December 2020 that fact-checks
‘have to stop’, messages obtained from $1.6bn Dominion lawsuit reveal
Sam Levine
in New York
Wed 29 Mar
2023 21.01 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/media/2023/mar/29/fox-news-trump-fact-check-election-lies-dominion
The top
executive at Fox News was furious one of the network’s reporters was fact-checking
Donald Trump’s false claims about the 2020 election, writing in a December 2020
email that it was “bad for business”.
Suzanne
Scott, the chief executive of Fox News, was responding in early December 2020
to an on-air fact-check by Eric Shawn, one of the network’s anchors. “This has
to stop now,” she wrote to Meade Cooper, another Fox executive. “This is bad
business and there clearly is a lack of understanding [sic] what is happening
in these shows. The audience is furious and we are just feeding them material.
Bad for business.”
A Fox News
spokesperson said Scott’s objection in the email was not about pushing back on
election claims. “This is not about fact-checking – the issue at hand is one
host calling out another,” the spokesperson said in a statement.
Scott also
asked other Fox employees to alert her if the network booked Mike Pompeo, the
former secretary of state, or Mike Lindell, a serial promoter of election
misinformation. “They would both get ratings,” she said.
The message
is part of a tranche of internal communications obtained by the voting
equipment company Dominion in its $1.6bn defamation lawsuit against Fox.
Dominion displayed a copy of the message a court hearing last week as its
lawyers argued that Fox knowingly aired false statements about Dominion because
it was concerned about losing viewers to rival networks such as Newsmax and One
America News (OAN). The Guardian obtained a copy of the message and the
slideshow that was presented in court.
“These
documents once again demonstrate Dominion’s continued reliance on cherry-picked
quotes without context to generate headlines in order to distract from the
facts of this case. The foundational right to a free press is at stake and we
will continue to fiercely advocate for the first amendment in protecting the
role of news organizations to cover the news,” the Fox spokesperson said.
Weeks
earlier, on 19 November, Scott also complained about a different fact-check on
air. “I can’t keep defending these reporters who don’t understand our viewers
and how to handle stories,” she wrote.
“The
audience feels like we crapped on [sic] and we have damaged their trust and
belief in us,” she wrote, adding that Fox nation had lost 25,000 subscribers.
“We can fix this but we cannot smirk at our viewers any longer.”
The
reporter who did the fact-check, Kristin Fisher, later said she felt she was
punished for telling the truth, NPR reported.
“This is
about the tone and delivery of the correspondent, it has nothing to do with
fact-checking,” a Fox spokesperson said.
Fox says it
was reporting on newsworthy allegations by the former president and his
lawyers, and that its viewers would not have understood its broadcasts about
Dominion to be statements of fact. It also says top executives at the company
and others who expressed concern about the accuracy of its statements about
Dominion were not directly involved in determining what went into each show.
Dominion’s
slideshow also included messages from Fox News host Maria Bartiromo, whose show
was a hotbed for false claims about the election. In one message, Bartiromo
appeared to be aware that Sidney Powell, one of Donald Trump’s lawyers, would
come on her show the next day to make specious claims about Dominion software
switching votes, saying: “OK, Sidney will say it tomorrow.” In notes to
herself, Bartiromo noted that Powell was being shut out from meetings with
Jared Kushner at the White House because he did not want to hear about
“conspiracy theories”.
Dominion
also revealed a key 13 November 2020 internal fact-check from Fox from a team
known as the “brain room” that debunked false claims about Dominion. Even
though executives testified that claims debunked by the brain room should not
have been aired, Fox continued to make false claims about Dominion after the
fact-check.
The
documents also show internal concern about statements being made by Jeanine
Pirro, another host who aired false Dominion claims. In one message,
fact-checkers went over a script for one of her shows and highlighted
inaccurate statements about Dominion. “The brain room is going through this
now. Jeanine dictated it to Tim. It’s rife with conspiracies and BS and yet
another example of why this woman should never be on live television,” Jerry
Andrews, a Fox executive, wrote in an email.
Jury
selection in the trial is scheduled to begin on 13 April in Wilmington,
Delaware. The trial is scheduled to begin 17 April and last six weeks.
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