Rupert Murdoch Admits That Fox Pushed Trump’s Election Lies for Profit

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It’s not red or blue—it is green.”

That single sentence sums up Rupert Murdoch’s craven approach to pushing Donald Trump’s election lies, documented in the bombshell new filing in Dominion Voting Systems’ defamation lawsuit against Fox News. Some of the self-damning Murdoch quotes came from his own deposition, others from e-mails or texts with other Fox management, board members and politicians.

Specifically, the red-blue-green quote came after he was asked by Dominion lawyers why he continued to give a platform to Mike Lindell, purveyor of lies about election fraud and lumpy pillows. After mocking the My Pillow guy’s election fraud blather—“At first you think it’s comic, then you get bored and irritated”—Murdoch admitted that Lindell remained on the air because he was a top Fox advertiser. That would be one of the most craven admissions in journalism history—if Fox were practicing actual journalism.

This latest Dominion filing in some ways tops the last one, in which it was confirmed that Fox’s three top prime-time hosts, Tucker Carlson, Sean Hannity and Laura Ingraham, knew Trump defenders were lying on air—and yet continued to book them. The trio had seconds-long truth outbreaks, in texts to one another, but in the end, they feared lying less than they feared losing their audience, and with it the network’s towering profitability. Carlson urged the firing of a Fox journalist who fact-checked Trump’s lies on air. “Please get her fired,” he said, adding: “It needs to stop immediately, like tonight. It’s measurably hurting the company. The stock price is down. Not a joke.”

​For his part, Murdoch showed spasms of conscience. “I’m a journalist at heart,” he claimed. “I like to be involved in these things.” That’s bullshit. Asked by a Dominion lawyer whether he “seriously doubted any claim of massive election fraud,” Murdoch replied: “Oh, yes.… I mean, we thought everything was on the up-and-up. I think that was shown when we announced Arizona,” referring to Fox’s controversial (on the right) but correct projection that Biden would win the newly purple state. And Fox did set up a “Brain Room” to fact-check various election fraud claims, and it found that most of them were false. But the network did nothing, except shut down the Brain Room.

And he did occasionally think about doing the right thing. From the Dominion filing, via Marcy Wheeler:

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