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Fox shareholder sues Murdoch over 2020 election coverage

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New York: A Fox Corp shareholder sued Chairman Rupert Murdoch (pictured) and four other board members on Tuesday, saying they failed to stop Fox News from reporting falsehoods about the 2020 US presidential election that damaged its credibility and prompted lawsuits.


Shareholder Robert Schwarz alleged in the lawsuit filed in Delaware Chancery Court that the directors breached their duties to ensure that Fox followed its own ethical standards and avoided reputational risk, and instead sought to keep supporters of former US president Donald Trump tuned in.


“FOX knew — from the Board on down — that Fox News was reporting false and dangerous misinformation about the 2020 Presidential election, but FOX was more concerned about short-term ratings and market share than the long-term damages of its failure to tell the truth,” he said in the lawsuit, which did not say how many shares he owned.


A Fox representative did not immediately respond to a request for comment.


The lawsuit seeks damages for the company from Rupert Murdoch, his son and Fox Chief Executive Lachlan Murdoch, and fellow directors Chase Carey, Roland Hernandez and Jacques Nasser. It also seeks unspecified corporate governance reforms.


Schwarz said the board’s failure to act on “red flags” subjected the network to defamation claims by two voting technology companies that Fox reported were involved in a conspiracy to steal the US presidential election from Trump.


Together, the two lawsuits by Dominion Voting Systems and Smartmatic USA seek damages totalling $4 billion.


The trial in the Dominion case is scheduled to begin in Delaware Supreme Court with opening statements on Monday and is expected to last five weeks.


Dominion alleges that Fox destroyed its business by knowingly airing false claims that its ballot counting machines were used to flip the results of the 2020 election. Fox has argued that election-rigging claims by Trump and his lawyers were inherently newsworthy and protected by legal doctrines concerning press freedom. In March, a trove of exhibits in the lawsuit became public, including e-mails and statements in which Rupert Murdoch and other top Fox executives said the claims made about Dominion on-air were false.


— Reuters


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