For many Murdoch-watchers, last week’s US$787.5 million settlement of Dominion’s lawsuit against Fox News has robbed the world of a riveting courtroom drama.
A big question had been whether the 92-year-old Fox Corporation chairman Rupert Murdoch would be testifying. What might it have looked like if he had fronted the Delaware courthouse? From the earliest years of the Murdoch empire as we know it, Rupert’s appearances under oath have been rare but revelatory events.
One of the first came in late January 1960, when the 28-year-old fronted a courtroom in Adelaide, South Australia. Upon arrival, Murdoch gave his occupation as “journalist” to the court stenographer, but when the Crown lawyer asked if had also been performing the role of News Limited’s managing director in August and September the previous year, Murdoch declined to answer — “on the grounds that it might tend to incriminate me”.
Murdoch’s stonewalling came as News Limited faced one of its biggest crises since Rupert inherited the company from his father, Sir Keith, in 1952. Months earlier, its afternoon paper The News had published a front-page report and a handful of newsstand posters covering a dramatic walkout in the Stuart royal commission. The inquiry was supposed to re-examine the 1959 murder conviction of Arrernte man Rupert Max Stuart, whose death sentence hinged on a signed confession of contested authorship, and came after The News and its editor Rohan Rivett — a social justice warrior by 1950s standards — helped bring international pressure upon the state government to reopen the case.
But a few days into the royal commission, Stuart’s lawyer Jack Shand QC abruptly withdrew after being interrupted during cross-examination by royal commissioner chief justice Mellis Napier. Controversially, Napier had previously presided over one of Stuart’s earlier failed appeals — and had dismissed claims that police had beaten the confession out of Stuart as “rubbish”. That afternoon in August 1959, The News’ headlines boldly declared “These Commissioners Cannot Do The Job” and “Commission Breaks Up — Shand Blasts Napier”.
For seven years, The News had been rocking the boat in mid-century Adelaide, where the influence of rival morning daily The Advertiser and Liberal Country League premier Sir Thomas Playford had been unchallenged for decades. Both Murdoch and Rivett had faced threats of libel and contempt since they’d moved to Adelaide, but when police officers entered News Limited’s North Terrace headquarters in early January 1960 to question Rivett, and later Murdoch, it seemed this was one crusade too far. By the end of the month, the company and its editor were facing trial for nine counts of libel, including the rare charge of seditious libel.
In court, News Limited’s journalists and its “boy publisher” tried their best to stare down the Crown’s efforts to uncover who was responsible for the August coverage. The questioning often descended into farce — two News Limited journalists were placed into custody for refusing to answer, while another was granted immunity from prosecution to compel him to talk.
Their eventual testimonies offer a rare insight into the inner workings of early News Limited, and how the afternoon newspaper model that formed the foundation of Murdoch’s small empire was, in some ways, structurally disposed to sensationalism. Unlike morning papers, they had to earn every sale with juicy headlines and front-page stories that grabbed the attention of passers-by. It was clickbait for the post-war era, and the ensuing debate even foreshadows recent cases like the Twitter-centric Dutton vs Bazzi (“My submission is that the poster would be so connected [to the article] that it would be wrong to treat it alone as defamatory,” Rivett’s lawyer argued in 1960.)
In the dock, Rupert continued to duck questions, but as the case progressed the logic behind the initial strategy of silence became clear: Rivett and the company might have been facing the charges, but it was Rupert himself who had composed two of the headlines cited by the Crown. Furthermore, a subsequent editorial that had sought to walk back some of their claims — “The headline should never have been published and we regret that it was,” it read — had also been drafted by Murdoch. But at trial, what seemed to be an attempt at de-escalation in the face of government pressure was brandished by the Crown as an admission of fault.
The “Poison Pen Libel Trial” ended in a bittersweet win for News Limited; the judge threw out the seditious libel counts, while the jury eventually rejected all but one of the remaining charges. The final count hung over Rivett for months, until it was dropped just weeks before Rupert sacked his old friend and longtime editor via letter (Jerry Hall can probably relate). Rupert had turned his focus to Sydney, where he promised readers of his latest acquisition to expect “a lack of bias” and “a more factual and sincere approach to reporting” — foreshadowing the “Fair and Balanced” mantra made infamous by Fox News.
A lot has changed between that courtroom in Adelaide and this week’s developments in Delaware. Murdoch might have left the progressive crusades of those early years behind, but both cases show that in moments of great crisis, Rupert — still regarding himself as a “journalist at heart” — is never far from the action. And as the slightly conciliatory depositions he made in January attest, even he sometimes recognises when his companies have flown too close to the sun.
Young Rupert: The Making of the Murdoch Empire by Walter Marsh is out on 1 August.
If Rupert M claimed to be ‘a journalist’ in 1960 then Julian Assange is definitely one in 2010.
Ah, Rupert, the wrinkly, aged, doyen of the media. Nice to see that so far the newest PM of Australia has not beaten a pathway to his door to kiss the proverbial ring, unlike most of his predecessors, particularly those of a certain hue. When Rupert finally leaves the stage, I suspect many will sigh with relief, while a smaller group will shed a tear (or appear too).
https://uat.crikey.com.au/2022/08/26/labors-deafening-silence-on-murdoch-meeting/
Lachlan doesn’t count??
With a bit of luck president trump (because I’ve come to realise that Americans are actually that stupid) will give him a state funeral, which will give progressive and down trodden Americans a chance to dance in the streets as he passes…
So we can take it as a “yes” that Anthony Albanese, Richard Marles and Penny Wong, as reported by Nine newspapers last week, met with Lachlan Moloch and NewsCorpse executives on Wednesday. While the office of Communications Minister Michelle Rowland was happy to confirm her non-participation, all we got from the prime minister, deputy prime minister and foreign minister was stony silence — despite repeated efforts to draw an answer.
I tried to include the link to the Crikey article of 29Aug2022 but it was AWAITENINGED – seems the madBot can’t cope with links to dodgy sites like…errr, this one.
So we can take it as a “yes” that Anthony Albanese, Richard Marles and Penny Wong, as reported by Nine newspapers last week, met with the Dauphin & and NewsCorpse executives on Wednesday. While the office of Communications Minister Michelle Rowland was happy to confirm her non-participation, all we got from the prime minister, deputy prime minister and foreign minister was stony silence — despite repeated efforts to draw an answer.
I tried to include the link to the Crikey article of 29Aug2022 but it was AWAITENINGED – seems the madBot can’t cope with links to dodgy sites like…errr, this one.
This was the 6th attempt to post the the piece – one naughty name word after another so this site is still in pre-emptive cringe mode.
See, for example https://uat.crikey.com.au/2022/08/29/albanese-murdoch-meeting-silence/
I’m in the same boat – “Awaiting for approval”
I sat through the tortuous days of Murdoch and Son fromting the British government over their phone hacking by the Sunday trash/sensationalist-anything for a sale-rubbish paper. Murdoch tried to pretend he was almost on his death bed and needed his son to answer questions until the son made a mess of some answers and – ta da, suddenly Murdoch senior jumped in to, in his opinion, correct the answers, this happened too often for his dearh bed plea to be believed. And he still thinks people will believe anything he says, we don’t you can only fool some of the people some of the time, thecrest are too smart to fall for it ad infinitum.
That would have been James, who asked the Select Committee chair for protection from hostile questions.
He at least has since seen the light – or perhaps just furious at not being the heir instead of the first born (son).
The Dauphin has quite a track record – OneTel, TEN and now this – stunning, expensive failure every time he tries to do something in the real world.
Unlike Elisabeth who chose to eschew the clan and did exceptionally well.
A pity we won’t see him try to duck in the dock again.
Far more relevant would be to dredge up Murdoch’s 1964 Daily Mirror yarn on Digby Bamford, the 14 year old kid who hanged himself as an early casualty of Murdoch’s grubby fledgling business model. Which can of course be summarised like this:
**As I said over in the ‘Bernard the Saint’ thread, Crikey is delusional if you think you the back-down from Lachlan is a ‘win’ for ‘free speech’ over the above business model, via the ‘public interest’ defence. It’s the precise opposite, even though the new defence wasn’t actually technically tested. The piece of ‘free speech’ over which you contrived this ill-chosen crusade was, actually, journalistically indefensible. It was rubbish journalism: a hyperbolic, overcooked, unnecessary, utterly ill-disciplined undergraduate fart. You went to war on pretty much the worst possible battlefield Crikey could have picked. Because…BK’s offending dumb sentence absolutely was defamatory – if ever anything can be. Which, of course, pretty much it can’t now. Not in litigated-to-the-end practice. Be honest: you’ve likely chucked the baby out with the bathwater here. I dunno, maybe in the end that might turn out to be the least-worst outcome. But for the interim – until someone does find the pockets and the appetite to test the new defence (and gee, BK, do you reckon it’ll more likely be a powerless nobody truly defamed by a multinat tabloid, or a powerful bully ‘defamed’ by a lefty shoestring outfit?) – all Crikey has really done is legitimise and accelerate what Murdoch’s instinctive career-long dysfunctional genius and dirty life’s work has been: the cynical gutter-spiralling deracinacation of any journalistic limitations at all. The press being defacto ‘allowed’, as a matter of ‘public interest’, to publicly label someone something as unambiguously and concretely detructive as an uncharged criminal…is no victory for free speech.
We’d all better prepare ourselves for a whole lot more Digby Bamford-type ‘public interest’ yarns from Rupert’s tabloids. No doubt targeting luridly-bankable individual scapegoats, from say the trans lobby, Indy politics, the Greens. The ABC’s obsessing over Pell, Porter, Tudge, #MeToo greenlit the acceleration of lefty trial-by-meeja, which was bad enough. But you soft pap lefties are lily-handed amateurs at it. You wait ’til you get a load of what your ‘win’ has invited Murdoch – all the conservative legacy press – to unfold. With impunity.