Murdoch told Kushner on election night that
Arizona result was ‘not even close’
Donald Trump’s son-in-law and adviser’s new book
recounts turmoil caused by Fox News decision to call state for Biden in 2020
Martin
Pengelly in New York
Thu 28 Jul
2022 06.00 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/jul/28/jared-kushner-murdoch-trump-arizona-election-2020
When Fox
News called Arizona for Joe Biden on election night 2020, infuriating Donald
Trump and fueling Republican election subversion attempts which continue to
this day, Rupert Murdoch told Jared Kushner “the numbers are ironclad – it’s
not even close”.
Details of
the Fox News owner’s conversation with Trump’s son-in-law and chief adviser
about the call which most observers say confirmed Trump’s defeat are contained
in Kushner’s memoir, Breaking History, which is due out next month.
They also
come as Murdoch-owned papers and even Fox News itself seem to turn against
Trump in light of the January 6 hearings on the US Capitol attack and his
attempt to overturn his election defeat.
A first
extract from the book, in which Kushner described being secretly treated for
thyroid cancer, was reported by Maggie Haberman of the New York Times.
On
Wednesday another Times reporter, Kenneth Vogel, tweeted pictures of pages from
Kushner’s book, each emblazoned with the word “confidential”.
Kushner’s
description of the shock of the Fox News Arizona call mirrors those in numerous
reports and books on Trump’s 2020 defeat, his refusal to accept it and the
attack on US democracy which followed.
“The
shocking projection brought our momentum to a screeching halt,” Kushner writes.
“It instantly changed the mood among our campaign’s leaders, who were
scrambling to understand the network’s methodology.”
Kushner
describes the Trump campaign’s focus on Arizona and writes that losing there
“would drastically narrow our path to victory”.
In
Landslide, a book released last year, the author Michael Wolff reported that
Murdoch gave his son Lachlan Murdoch approval for Fox News to call Arizona for
Biden with “a signature grunt” and a barb for Trump: “Fuck him.”
Fox News
denied Wolff’s story.
Kushner writes: “I dialed Rupert Murdoch and asked why
Fox News had made the Arizona call before hundreds of thousands of votes were
tallied. Rupert said he would look into the issue, and minutes later he called
back.
“‘Sorry Jared, there is nothing I can do,’” he said.
“‘The Fox News data authority says the numbers are ironclad – he says it won’t
be close.’”
Biden won
Arizona by about 10,000 votes, a margin which increased after a partisan audit
encouraged by Trump allies and commissioned by state Republicans.
Key members
of the Fox News decision desk left after the election. Chris Stirewalt, the
politics editor, was fired. He has appeared before the January 6 committee.
“We knew
[Arizona] would be a consequential call because it was one of five states that
really mattered,” Stirewalt testified.
Stirewalt
also said that by the time of the Arizona call, Trump’s chances of beating
Biden were “very small” and “getting smaller”. After Arizona, he said, those chances
dwindled to “none”.
In his
book, Kushner shades close to his father-in-law’s lie about electoral fraud in
Biden’s victory, writing: “2020 was full of anomalies.”
The
election was called for Biden on 7 November, when Pennsylvania fell into his
column. He won the electoral college by 306-272, the same margin Trump called a
landslide when it landed in his favour against Hillary Clinton in 2016. Biden
won the popular vote by more than 7m.
In his
passage on the speech Trump gave in the early hours of 4 November, the day
after election day, claiming “Frankly, we did win this election”, Kushner says
he was called by Karl Rove, the strategist who helped George W Bush win “the
closest presidential election in US history”, against Al Gore in 2000.
Trump
claimed to have been the victim of fraud. Rove, Kushner writes, said: “The
president’s rhetoric is all wrong. He’s going to win. Statistically, there’s no
way the Democrats can catch up with you now.”
Kushner
says he responded: “Call the president and tell him that.”
Trump later
turned on Rove, who he said called him at 10.30pm on election night “to
congratulate me on ‘a great win’”. Fox News called Arizona just before
midnight.
On
Wednesday, Vogel also tweeted pages in which Kushner describes his work on
presidential pardons.
Kushner
says he did not oppose a pardon for Steve Bannon, the former Trump strategist
who was accused of fraud but who was a prominent White House leaker, because of
the work Bannon did on Trump’s winning campaign in 2016.
He also
writes that when Trump pardoned Alice Johnson, a Black grandmother sentenced on
a minor drugs-related charge of the sort Kushner targeted in his work on
sentencing reform, Trump said: “Let’s hope Alice doesn’t go out and kill
anyone!”
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