Lachlan Murdoch

British-born media executive
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External Websites
Also known as: Lachlan Keith Murdoch
Quick Facts
In full:
Lachlan Keith Murdoch
Born:
September 8, 1971, London, England (age 53)
Notable Family Members:
father Rupert Murdoch

Lachlan Murdoch (born September 8, 1971, London, England) is a British-American media executive who was set to take sole control of the global media empire built by his father, the Australian-American media tycoon Rupert Murdoch, after the latter announced in September 2023 his imminent retirement. At the time of his father’s announcement, Lachlan Murdoch was already executive chair and CEO (chief executive officer) of the Fox Corporation, whose assets include broadcast networks and television stations, and cochair of News Corporation (usually called News Corp.), which owns the publishers of British and American newspapers including The Times and The Wall Street Journal and popular tabloids such as The Sun and the New York Post.

Early life

Lachlan Murdoch is the third child and eldest son of Rupert Murdoch; his mother is Rupert’s second wife, the Scottish journalist Anna Maria Murdoch (née Torv). Lachlan spent most of his childhood in New York City, where he attended the elite private schools the Dalton School and Trinity School. In 1994 he graduated from Princeton University with a bachelor’s degree in philosophy.

Career

After graduating from Princeton, Lachlan Murdoch went to work in the family business, starting out in newspaper companies in Australia and eventually ascending to the chair of News Limited, the holding company for all of the Australian properties of News Corp., the multinational conglomerate founded by his father in 1980. Murdoch later became a deputy chief operating officer of News Corp., in charge of television stations and print publishing operations. Notably, however, he was responsible for a significant business failure resulting from his decision to invest in the telecommunications venture One.Tel, which collapsed in 2001.

Murdoch resigned from News Corp. in 2005 amid disputes with the then head of the Fox News Channel, Roger Ailes. According to the Australian journalist Paddy Manning, the author of The Successor: The High Stakes Life of Lachlan Murdoch (2022), Murdoch left the company because he felt that his father had sided with Ailes against him. He returned to Australia and started an investment firm that put money into different businesses, including media companies and an Indian Premier League cricket team.

Murdoch returned to the family fold in the mid-2010s after a phone-hacking scandal in Great Britain involving News Corp.’s News of the World, which led to the shutdown of that tabloid. “He was watching the family tear itself apart over the phone-hacking scandal,” Manning told the Associated Press in 2023, adding that he was “instrumental in trying to circle the wagons and turn the guns outwards.”

Upon Murdoch’s return, he and his brother, James Murdoch, became cochairs of News Corp. and 21st Century Fox, the latter created in 2013 to take over News Corp.’s television and media holdings. But the two brothers had different visions for their companies’ future as well as different worldviews. James wished to create an international brand that would seem sensible to political centrists and those with a globalist perspective, while Lachlan favored a brand that would promote far-right politics and nationalism.

In 2019 Rupert Murdoch finalized the sale of most of the holdings of 21st Century Fox, including the movie studio 20th Century Fox, to the Disney Company for some $71 billion. He made Lachlan Murdoch chief executive of the new Fox Corporation, the parent company of the Fox News Channel, a move that appeared to put his son in line to succeed him. James Murdoch, who had been donating to liberal causes, resigned from News Corp. after the sale, saying in a letter that he had “disagreements over certain editorial content published by the company’s news outlets and certain other strategic decisions.”

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As head of Fox Corporation, Lachlan Murdoch oversaw the Fox News Channel’s agreement in 2023 to pay $787.5 million to settle a lawsuit filed by Dominion Voting Systems over the network’s continual airing of false claims that the company had rigged voting machines to help defeat then U.S. Pres. Donald Trump in the presidential election of 2020. Following the settlement, Murdoch claimed that Fox News had merely been acting as a news organization by reporting on newsworthy events.

In September 2023 Rupert Murdoch, who was then 92 years old, announced that he would soon retire from the boards of directors of both Fox Corporation and News Corp., which would leave the then 52-year-old Lachlan Murdoch in charge of both companies. Although the younger Murdoch was less outwardly political, his father said in a note to employees that he expected his son to maintain the Fox News Channel’s conservative bent: “My father firmly believed in freedom, and Lachlan is absolutely committed to the cause.”

Although Lachlan Murdoch speaks with an American accent, he uses Australian expressions such as “G’day, mate.” He has reportedly confided to a friend that he feels most like himself when he is in Australia. Murdoch married an Australian model, Sarah O’Hare, in 1999.

Fred Frommer