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Rupert Murdoch admits that Fox commentators backed false claims about Biden's victory

2023-02-28T15:34:36.719Z


The communication mogul rejects that the company assumed Trump's lies, although he described some of the Republican's lies as nonsense


A headline about then-President Donald Trump, at the Fox News studios in New York.Mark Lennihan (AP)

Media mogul Rupert Murdoch has admitted that some guest commentators on the ultra-conservative Fox News television network endorsed false claims about alleged 2020 election theft denounced by Republican candidate Donald Trump.

“Some of our commentators supported it,” Murdoch declared under oath in a defamation lawsuit, when asked if some of the presenters defended the thesis that the electoral victory did not legitimately correspond to Democrat Joe Biden.

However, the businessman has rejected that the company as an entity supported Trump's electoral lies, that is, knowing that they were falsehoods.

The release of Murdoch's statement, which came last month, has revealed that the Australian-American businessman called some of the lies about Trump's alleged voter fraud "nonsense."

However, he did nothing to stop them from spreading further, the lawsuit states.

Fox News, for its part, has counterattacked by accusing the complainant company, voting machine maker Dominion, of filing a lawsuit on "dubious" grounds.

"Dominion's lawsuit has always taken more into account the headlines it will generate than its entity to withstand legal and factual scrutiny," reads a company statement.

In this way, the media company has defended the actions of its executives and guests during the 2020 elections, alleging that the live statements about electoral fraud have been taken out of context.

Still, Dominion, whose lawsuit assessed the amount of the lie at $1.6 billion, is trying to prove that Fox executives knew Trump's statements were false but aired them anyway for profit.

Fox leads the Democratic-oriented CNN in audience in the field of continuous information networks.

It is not the only controversy in which Fox has been involved in recent days.

Last week it was learned that the speaker of the House of Representatives, the Republican Kevin McCarthy, exclusively provided the star presenter of the chain, Tucker Carlson, unpublished recordings of the surveillance cameras of the Congress during the assault on the Capitol by a Trumpist horde. , on January 6, 2021.

Dozens of media outlets, including

The Washington Post

,

The New York Times

, the Associated Press, CBS News and CNN, demanded last Friday that congressional leaders make public the set of previously unpublished images provided exclusively to Carlson, who since the The very day of the attack has downplayed the violence perpetrated by Trump supporters.

Carlson, Fox News' most-watched

prime-time

anchor , has yet to broadcast such footage, some 44,000 hours of footage in all.

The presenter, a reference to the American

alternative right

, affirmed last week that his team has been analyzing the content and seeing "how it contradicts or not the story that we have been told for more than two years", referring to the official version and the federal investigations into the insurrection.

Carlson noted that they will likely air next week.

Murdoch recently backtracked on his bid to reunite the two media companies he owns, News Corp and Fox Corp. The former owns the influential

The Wall Street Journal

and

Financial Times

.

In a statement to the US stock market regulator, the tycoon stressed at the end of January that the combination of both companies "is not optimal" for shareholders, some of them very critical of his plans.

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Source: elparis

All news articles on 2023-02-28

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