Rupert Murdoch is set to face his kids in court, with Fox News’ fate in the balance

The future of Fox News — one of the most influential players in television and conservative politics — appears likely to be determined, improbably, by a probate court official in Reno, Nevada. Absent a last-minute settlement, the trial begins Monday.

The proceedings more broadly involve the disposition of 93-year-old Rupert Murdoch’s global media empire, which also includes the Wall Street Journal, the Times of London, the Australian and the New York Post.

Murdoch wants to amend his trust to hand off full control to his eldest son, Lachlan, who is currently running their companies. Lachlan’s three eldest siblings — those who are poised to share control of the business with him after their father dies — oppose the change. The two youngest children — daughters from Rupert Murdoch’s third marriage — share equally in the financial bounty, but have been promised no control.

The stakes and arc of the family’s struggles are Shakespearean and inspired the HBO drama Succession; the pettiness can sometimes seem Seinfeldian. The court battle is about money and power, but also whether Fox News should remain relentlessly partisan and right-wing as part of a business plan to yield the best results.

Lachlan’s siblings appear to be less enamored of the hard-right line. His only brother, James, has become increasingly critical of the network’s pro-Trump and often anti-news populism embraced by the network.

“If they were to change the direction and move [Fox News] into the direction of a CNN format, or go down the middle, it will lose its identity, lose viewers and lose revenues,” says Joe Peyronnin, a veteran network news executive who served as Fox News president in its earliest stages, in the mid-1990s.

“I say that as someone who is a journalist and who would love to see that change,” Peyronnin adds. “They have been the single most divisive entity in the last 30 years in politics. If there was no Fox News, we’d still have mud fights, but it wouldn’t be like today.”

A compromise to sidestep a nasty divorce trial

Murdoch’s petition to change the terms of the trust were first cited by the New York Times and subsequently affirmed to NPR by three people with ties to various interested parties. Those people spoke to NPR on condition they not be named, as the probate commissioner has ruled the proceedings – and even the identities of the parties involved – are confidential.

The probate official has ruled against a motion by NPR and other news organizations to open up the trial for public view.

The legal battle stems from a fateful decision a generation ago: Murdoch agreed to set up an irrevocable family trust to sidestep a battle royal over his assets when he left his second wife, Anna Torv Murdoch Mann. He gave his four oldest adult children equal shares and equal control over his holdings after his death.

Rupert Murdoch with his then-wife Anna and their 14-month old daughter Elisabeth at their home in London in 1969.
Rupert Murdoch with his then-wife Anna and their 14-month old daughter Elisabeth at their home in London in 1969. (Chris Ware/Getty Images | Hulton Archive)

In exchange for the agreement — and a $110 million payout — Murdoch Mann agreed to forgo a protracted fight over her share of his media holdings.

(Rupert Murdoch’s younger two daughters with his third wife, Wendi Deng, were ultimately given full financial parity with their siblings, but no voting control in the trust. He had no children with his fourth wife, Jerry Hall. He married his fifth wife earlier this year.)

Rupert Murdoch believes Lachlan will stay the course

After years of corporate competition between James and Lachlan, the elder brother prevailed: Lachlan is now executive chairman of Fox Corp., the television wing of the empire, and chairman of News Corp., its publishing arm.

Lachlan Murdoch, right, with his wife Sarah and others as they watch a sailing regatta in Sydney, Australia in February.
Lachlan Murdoch, right, with his wife Sarah and others as they watch a sailing regatta in Sydney, Australia in February. (Mark Baker/AP | AP)

The stock price of News Corp. has soared in the five and a half years since Lachlan took over. That of Fox Corp. has been bumpier. Due to a massive phone-hacking debacle involving News Corp.’s British tabloids and a series of defamation suits involving Fox News, both arms have been mired in costly and debilitating legal scandals.

In Reno, Rupert Murdoch is arguing that Prudence, Elisabeth and James are likely to soft-peddle the network’s ideology, which would undermine its appeal to its right-leaning audience. Rupert and his four eldest children are expected to show up in court this week.

People who have worked for Rupert Murdoch say he is incensed by the dispute.

He believes that he was the singular force propelling the creation of this $32 billion continent-hopping media juggernaut from the single paper in Adelaide, Australia left to him by his father; that he should determine who controls the companies, though they are publicly traded, by right and to avoid confusion and litigation after his death; that his children were well taken care of when they each received $2 billion from the sale of major Fox entertainment properties to Disney in 2019; and that he and Lachlan have led the twin television and publishing companies ably since that sale.

The Wall Street Journal recently reported that after that sale to Disney, Rupert Murdoch asked each of his four eldest children to give him more than $100 million. Lachlan, Prudence and Elisabeth did so. James refused. (The Journal is ultimately controlled by Lachlan Murdoch; its reporting has not been publicly challenged.)

Over the years, various children have flitted in and out of favor with their father. Rupert pitted the two boys, in particular, against each other. Prudence, the eldest by his first wife, often served as her dad’s adviser as she forswore any corporate ambition. Elisabeth attended the Super Bowl in early 2023 with Rupert (and Elon Musk). She did not attend her father’s wedding earlier this year. Neither did James. By then, they were already on opposing sides in court.

Other Murdoch children question Rupert and Lachlan’s leadership

James and his wife Kathryn Murdoch have emerged as strong philanthropists for climate change, voting rights and other liberal causes. He has advocated for Fox to more closely resemble the centrist and less confrontational Sky News in Europe, which James oversaw when it was in the Murdoch fold. James has criticized Murdoch’s Australian publications over coverage of global warming and Fox over its treatment of the 2020 election and the January 6 siege of Congress.

James Murdoch, right, and his wife Kathryn attend the 2024 Vanity Fair Oscar Party in Beverly Hills, California.
James Murdoch, right, and his wife Kathryn attend the 2024 Vanity Fair Oscar Party in Beverly Hills, California. (Amy Sussman/Getty Images | Getty Images North America)

Those with links to James, Elisabeth and Prudence say that under their father and brother, the companies have taken dire hits. The scandals that have beset the empire on both sides of the Atlantic have cost well over $2 billion so far. The litigation continues.

And they make a further case: that Fox News’ embrace of a Trumpian conservatism endangers their news outlets’ reputation for journalism.

Last year, Rupert and Lachlan agreed Fox Corp. would pay a record $787.5 million to settle a defamation suit brought by Dominion Voting Systems against Fox News over false claims of fraud in the 2020 elections. Evidence that became public included emails in which the father and son gave their blessing to network executives’ decision to indulge former President Donald Trump’s lies to avoid alienating viewers.

Rupert Murdoch officially stepped away from active control of his companies last year, a few months after the settlement. He has told associates his actions were only to ensure clarity of corporate strategy and an embrace of what works.

In Reno, the probate commissioner, Edmund J. Gorman Jr., concluded that Rupert Murdoch had the right to revise the trust if it worked to the benefit of all of his heirs. Gorman must decide whether the media magnate has made a good-faith argument that that is what his proposed changes are intended to do.

Past suggestions of settlements have fallen apart. It would be financially difficult for Lachlan to buy out his siblings. And the others, should they hold onto their voting stakes, may choose to sell off properties rather than retain them for Lachlan to run. Presumably, after Lachlan joins Rupert Murdoch in seeking to take away their influence, the other three children might choose to unseat him as corporate chief and replace him with someone else.

Transcript:

ARI SHAPIRO, HOST:

A fierce and soapy family drama is playing out in a probate court in Nevada right now, and it could affect the news that Americans get from outlets like The Wall Street Journal, the New York Post and Fox News. Yes, we are talking about the $33 billion Murdoch media empire. Rupert Murdoch is squaring off against three of his children in a fight for control, and NPR’s David Folkenflik has the details. Hey, David.

DAVID FOLKENFLIK, BYLINE: Hey, Ari.

SHAPIRO: Lawyers for Rupert Murdoch are in court, opposed by three of his eldest children. Why are they on opposite sides of this?

FOLKENFLIK: Well, right now, that trust was set up so that all four of these eldest Murdoch children would have an equal say in what the family trust decided to do with the shares that really control the two halves of the Murdoch empire. That is the print side that does the Journal and Post, as you mentioned, and, of course, the broadcast side that has Fox News. And he wants to undo that. He says his elder son, Lachlan Murdoch, who’s helped lead these companies for the last few years alongside him, has shown himself. He wants to undo the trust and say Lachlan Murdoch and Lachlan Murdoch alone is going to lead the trust, and therefore have basically effective control of the companies.

SHAPIRO: Why was the trust set up that way?

FOLKENFLIK: Well, it was the result of a bargain and a hard-fought bargain at that. In – a generation ago, Murdoch decided abruptly to leave his wife, Anna Torv Murdoch, as was at the time, for his – what became his third wife, Wendi Deng. And she said, look. I’m going to take only a hundred million dollars – let’s put that in quotes – only a hundred million dollars and not fight you for half of your billions of dollars, but I want to protect my three kids. And I want to protect their elder half-sister, Prudence, by Murdoch’s first marriage, and say all of them will have a share once you, Rupert, are no longer on the scene. And Murdoch assented to it. He said that’s fine.

But, of course, Rupert Murdoch being Rupert Murdoch, he says, years later, two things. One, I built this. This is my vision. This is, you know, I have built this to be a strong and often very conservative media outlet that has allowed me power and influence on countries across the globe. And I want to find a way to make it yield to my desires. And Lachlan buys into that and has shown himself to be cast in my image. And the other kids don’t look that way. And the second thing to remember about Rupert Murdoch is he’s always been this way. Time and again, he’s struck deals, even signed contracts and violated or broken or ignored them when they became inconvenient.

SHAPIRO: Can you tell how likely he is to win this case?

FOLKENFLIK: You know, let me just say this. This is filed in Nevada. And part of that is that these courts are often sympathetic to the very wealthy figures who seek them out, even though, you know, Nevada is not particularly a place where Murdoch has done business. It’s been very secretive. Actually, NPR, The New York Times and a handful of other news outlets have been interceded to try to get the judge to consider whether to open this to the public, as might be the case in many other venues. And the trial portion is set to start next week. But I’ve talked to lawyers, experts in estates, experts in Rupert Murdoch, people who have worked for him for a long time, people who have – affiliated with his kids. And we just don’t know how it’s going to play out.

SHAPIRO: Well, just in our last 30 seconds or so, families fight all the time over money and inheritance, but how could this affect the news that Americans see from places like Fox or The Wall Street Journal?

FOLKENFLIK: Hugely consequential, right? So Lachlan Murdoch and Rupert are saying in court, we have to run Fox as – they’re saying, you know, right-center conservative but really right-wing news outlet. Let’s not forget James Murdoch, his other son, has endorsed Kamala Harris for president, not Donald Trump. And so that’s a huge question of the tone. James Murdoch and two of his sisters want to pull it more to the center. And the second thing is the other Murdoch kids may well want to sell off other properties rather than let their brother Lachlan run it. They feel like, you know, look. We should see the dividends rather than let him have all the glory. He’s just betrayed us.

SHAPIRO: All right. NPR’s David Folkenflik. Thank you.

FOLKENFLIK: You bet.

 

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