The Murdoch "Succession" battle for the media empire is strictly confidential

Top secret
Infighting
Lawyering up
Possible loophole
Murdoch's angle
Politically more moderate siblings
A poisonous alliance
In the Biden camp
Claims of
Defamation
The British lawsuits
The damage wreaked by an ultra-conservative agenda
Family rift
No strings attached
The fallout
Top secret

Combat has commenced between the two warring factions of the Murdoch dynasty for control of its media empire after 93-year-old Rupert Murdoch's death. But no one but the family members, their lawyers and a handful of courtroom employees have been privy to how the battle is unfolding.

Infighting

Heard in a probate court in Reno Nevada, the case pits Rupert Murdoch and his eldest son, Lachlan, against three of Murdoch’s other children: James, and daughters Elisabeth and Prudence, but no details have seen the light of day so far.

"Irrevocable" family trust

Murdoch’s eldest son Lachlan took the reins after Murdoch stepped down as chairman of Fox and News Corps last year, but an “irrevocable” family trust exists that gives his siblings Prudence, Elizabeth and James an equal say in the powerful corporation's future.

Lawyering up

Now Rupert's lawyers are in a set-to with Prudence, Elizabeth and James who are challenging their father's attempt to alter the “irrevocable” family trust to give Lachlan full control on his demise.

Possible loophole

Though the trust is irrevocable, it carries a narrow provision for changes done in good faith and only if they benefit all of its members, according to CNN.

Murdoch's angle

Court documents obtained by The New York Times reveal that Murdoch is arguing that handing full control to Lachlan will benefit all of the trust’s members by ensuring the value of the company.

Politically more moderate siblings

Murdoch’s fear is that, being more politically moderate than Lachlan, the three siblings might change the political orientation of Fox News and also the News Corps which own  more than 100 newspapers, prompting profits to tumble.

"No longer the pope"

Vanity Fair maintains that the family’s legal wrangle indicates that Murdoch’s influence is in decline. “Murdoch is no longer the pope,” a political commentator, told the news site.

A poisonous alliance

Murdoch’s son James effectively left the company in 2020. According to Vanity Fair, James has maintained for some time that Fox News and its alliance with Donald Trump poisoned the company’s reputation.

In the Biden camp

“We’ve been arguing about politics since I was a teenager,” James told the New York Times in 2020, referring to his father. That same year, he and his wife, Kathryn, donated more than $600,000 to Joe Biden’s presidential campaign.

Claims of "rigged" voting

Fox is at the heart of the family tensions. A vehicle for pushing Murdoch’s political agenda, it crossed a line when heavyweights like Tucker Carlson told audiences that the 2020 election result was “rigged,” thanks to the voting machines.

Defamation

Now, a defamation case worth $787.5 million is being brought against the company by Dominion Voting Systems and an even more damaging lawsuit, worth $2.7 billion, is in the pipeline brought by Smartmatic.

The British lawsuits

Add to that the troubles the company is weathering in the UK with British Royal, Prince Harry, heading up a small battalion of 40 plaintiffs due in court at the start of 2025.

The damage wreaked by an ultra-conservative agenda

James, Prudence and Elizabeth’s argument rests on the fact that the current ultra-conservative agenda is, in fact, damaging the company by draining its coffers.

Family rift

Certainly, the battle being waged in the courts has taken a toll on family relations with only Lachlan attending his father’s California wedding in June to fifth wife, retired marine biologist, Elena Zhukova, 67.

No strings attached

Murdoch’s marriage to Zhukova is not expected to have any impact on the trust that holds 40% of News Corp and Fox voting shares, according to a report in the Financial Times.

The fallout

Robert Thompson, a media scholar at Syracuse University, tells The Guardian, “This is arguably the single most influential media outlet in all of the English-speaking world. How this turns out has a real, significant impact on real people living on planet Earth.”

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