OPINION
DAVID
FIRESTONE
Fox News Remains an Aberration in American
Journalism
April 19,
2023
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/04/19/opinion/editorials/fox-news-settlement.html
David
Firestone
By David
Firestone
Mr.
Firestone is a member of the editorial board.
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The
decision by Dominion Voting Systems on Tuesday to settle its defamation suit
against Fox News is no doubt a disappointment to the many people who have been
viciously demeaned and insulted by the network’s hosts over the years and who
now won’t get to see those hosts writhe on the witness stand as they are forced
to admit their lies. But the settlement is also a lost opportunity for the
profession of journalism.
A six-week
trial, especially if it ended in a victory for Dominion, could have
demonstrated to the public in painstaking detail what an abject aberration Fox
has become among American news organizations. In-person testimony would have
illustrated what the pre-trial evidence had begun to show: that Fox hosts and
executives knew full well that the conspiracy theories they peddled about the
outcome of the 2020 election were false, but they broadcast them anyway to hang
on to viewers who didn’t want to hear the truth. A loss by Fox, with a
staggering damage award, would have demonstrated that its behavior was so
exceptional and outrageous that it had to be punished.
People
inclined to believe that all news organizations deliberately lie to build their
audience may not consider Fox’s actions to be the least bit aberrant. But if
that were true, there would be a lot more trials like the one that almost
happened in this case. In fact, there have been very few media trials in recent
years — usually in the single digits each year, according to one study —
compared with the thousands of civil trials each year. Most defamation cases
are dismissed before they ever get near a trial, in part because the plaintiff
could not come close to proving a news organization met the “actual malice”
standard set out in the landmark New York Times v. Sullivan case of 1964, but
also often because the plaintiff couldn’t even convince the judge that the
defamatory material was false. News organizations also win dismissals by
persuading judges that the material at issue was a legitimate opinion or was a
“fair report” of allegations made at a public meeting or trial.
Fox
couldn’t persuade a judge of any of those defenses. In fact, the judge in this
case, Eric Davis, ruled in March that it “is CRYSTAL clear that none of the
statements relating to Dominion about the 2020 election are true” — a decision
that was a huge setback for Fox and may have led to its eagerness to settle the
case.
Most
defamation cases that are not dismissed are settled before trial, and the
Dominion case essentially fits that pattern even though a jury had already been
selected. But the size of the monetary settlement that Fox must pay, $787.5
million, also makes it a huge outlier. The next-largest publicly disclosed
settlement of a defamation case against a major news organization was reached
in 2017, when ABC News settled a case for at least $177 million. (Alex Jones,
who was ordered last year to pay over $1.4 billion to families of victims in
the Sandy Hook shooting, is not part of a legitimate news organization.)
Still,
nothing would have compared with a full-length trial in this case and a victory
for Dominion, which many legal experts said was a strong possibility. That kind
of defeat for a major news organization almost never happens, and the reason is
that unlike their counterparts at Fox, journalists in conventional newsrooms
don’t actually plot to deceive their audiences. They might make mistakes, they
might be misled by a source or cast a story in a way they later regret, but
with very rare exceptions they don’t deliberately lie.
The emails
and text messages demonstrating Fox’s knowing deceit, which came out in
pre-trial discovery, were shocking both in their cynicism and in their
deviation from industry norms. Vociferous press critics on the right and the
left will scoff at this notion, but the fact is that journalists in functional
newsrooms want to tell the truth. And they do so not because they fear getting
sued but because that’s why they got into the business. I’ve worked for more
than four decades in six American newsrooms, large and small, and the pattern
of behavior shown by Fox would have been unthinkable in any of them at any
time.
That’s why
a loss by Fox would not have raised significant press freedom issues, nor would
it have increased the threat that journalists would regularly be sued for
defamation. Because of the Sullivan case, news organizations are protected from
libel judgments if they do not recklessly disregard the truth or engage in
actual malice, which almost all newsrooms scrupulously avoid doing. Fox,
however, sped right past those red lights, got caught and then spent an
enormous amount of money to avoid the stain of a potential guilty verdict and
the spectacle of its chairman, Rupert Murdoch, testifying to its dysfunction.
(The company again demonstrated its disdain for the truth by issuing a
statement on Tuesday afternoon saying the settlement demonstrated its
“commitment to the highest journalistic standards.”) A second chance at clarity
is coming with a libel suit against Fox by a different voting-technology
company, Smartmatic. Maybe this time the opportunity to perform a public
service by conducting a trial will outweigh the temptation of a Fox settlement
offer.
David
Firestone, a former reporter and editor for The Times, is a member of the
editorial board. @fstonenyc
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