Rupert Murdoch under fire for suggesting sexual harassment claims were nonsense

  • 17/12/2017
Rupert Murdoch under fire for suggesting sexual harassment claims were nonsense

Rupert Murdoch has come under fire for comments he made in an interview suggesting he viewed the sexual harassment cases that have enveloped Fox News as "nonsense".

Murdoch made the comment on Thursday in an interview with the UK's Sky News about the blockbuster $US52.4 billion acquisition agreement that 21st Century Fox has set with Disney.

Amid growing anger online about what appeared to be the company chairman dismissing the severity of the problems at Fox News, the parent company sought to clarify what the mogul meant.

Murdoch called "nonsense" on the suggestion that the Fox News scandals have hurt 21st Century Fox's bottom line in a material way and will convince UK regulators to bar Fox's bid to buy up the remaining 61 per cent of Sky that it does not already own.

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"It's all nonsense," Murdoch said on December 14 in the interview with Sky News' Ian King.

"There was a problem with our chief executive (Roger Ailes), sort of, over the years, but in isolated incidents. Soon as we investigated he was out of the place in hours. Well, three or four days. But nothing else since then."

Murdoch's lack of reference to Bill O'Reilly's ouster in April -- nine months after Ailes was fired -- for sexual harassment allegations has outraged women's rights activists. Murdoch is also being blasted for adding as an aside: "It was largely political, because (Fox News is) conservative."

A 21st Century Fox spokeswoman sought to counter the negative reaction with a lengthy explanation of Murdoch's intentions.

"Rupert never characterised the sexual harassment matters at Fox News as 'nonsense'. Rather, he responded negatively to the suggestion that sexual harassment issues were an obstacle to the company's bid for the rest of Sky," the spokeswoman said.

"Under Rupert's leadership and with his total support, the company exited (Fox News CEO) Roger Ailes, compensated numerous women who were mistreated; trained virtually all of its employees; exited its biggest star; and hired a new head of HR.

"By his actions, Rupert has made it abundantly clear that he understands that there were real problems at Fox News. Rupert values all of the hard-working colleagues at Fox News, and will continue to address these matters to ensure Fox News maintains its commitment to having a work environment based on the values of trust and respect," she said.

Reuters