Rupert Murdoch, chairman of the conservative media empire that owns Fox News, acknowledged in a deposition that several hosts for his networks promoted the false narrative that the 2020 election was stolen from former President Donald J. Trump, and that he could have stopped them but didn’t, court documents released on Monday showed.
“They endorsed,” Murdoch said under oath in response to direct questions about the Fox hosts Sean Hannity, Jeanine Pirro, Lou Dobbs and Maria Bartiromo, according to a legal filing by Dominion Voting Systems.
“I would have liked us to be stronger in denouncing it in hindsight,” he added, while also disclosing that he was always dubious of Trump’s claims of widespread voter fraud.
Asked whether he doubted Trump, Murdoch responded: “Yes. I mean, we thought everything was on the up-and-up.”
At the same time, he rejected the accusation that Fox News as a whole had endorsed the stolen election narrative.
“Not Fox,” he said.
Murdoch’s remarks, which he made last month as part of Dominion’s $1.6 billion defamation lawsuit against Fox, added to the evidence that Dominion has accumulated as it tries to prove its central allegation: The people running the country’s most popular news network knew Trump’s claims of voter fraud in the 2020 election were false but broadcast them anyway in a reckless pursuit of ratings and profit.
Proof to that effect would help Dominion clear the high legal bar set by the Supreme Court for defamation cases.
To prevail, Dominion must show not only that Fox broadcast false information, but that it did so knowingly.
A judge in Delaware state court has scheduled a month-long trial.
The new documents provide a dramatic account from inside the network, depicting a frantic scramble as Fox tried to woo back its large conservative audience after ratings collapsed in the wake of Trump’s loss.
Fox had been the first network to call Arizona for Joe Biden on election night — essentially declaring him the next President. When Trump refused to concede, viewers began to change the channel.
New York Times News Service