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9 Sep 2025 17:25
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  •   Home > News > International

    Rupert Murdoch settles court fight with children over media empire's future

    The deal ends a bitter Succession-style dispute that had pitted members of the family against each other in court, and means Rupert Murdoch's media outlets are likely to retain their right-wing bent after his death.


    Rupert Murdoch's family has reached a deal that will see his conservative son Lachlan cement control of his media empire.

    The agreement ends a bitter Succession-style dispute that had pitted the Murdoch siblings against each other in an American court, and it means Rupert's media outlets are likely to retain their right-wing bent after his death.

    The feud was sparked by a plan to change the Murdoch family trust to hand control of the family's companies to Lachlan when Rupert, 94, dies.

    The plan required a rewrite of the trust's "irrevocable" terms, which would have evenly divided control of Fox Corporation and News Corporation between Rupert's oldest children.

    James, Elisabeth and Prudence Murdoch opposed the plan, which was devised by Rupert and Lachlan, and the dispute went before a court in Nevada last year

    In December, the court's probate commissioner found Lachlan and his father had acted in "bad faith", and ruled in favour of the three siblings.

    "The effort was an attempt to stack the deck in Lachlan Murdoch's favour after Rupert Murdoch's passing so that the succession would be immutable," the commissioner wrote. Rupert had vowed to appeal.

    Now, a Fox Corporation statement says the family has "reached a mutual resolution of the legal proceeding in Nevada … resulting in the termination of all litigation".

    James, Elisabeth and Prudence will each receive more than $US1 billion ($1.52 billion) for their shares in the companies, The New York Times reported, citing an anonymous source with knowledge of the negotiations.

    Fox said the three siblings would also be prevented from ever buying back into the companies.

    The family trust will be resolved, and new trusts will be set up for Lachlan and his younger half-sisters, Chloe and Grace, who had a non-controlling stake in the original trust.

    Since Rupert stepped down as chair of both companies in 2023, Lachlan has been the sole chair of News Corporation, which owns many of Australia's biggest newspapers, and The Wall Street Journal and The New York Post in the US.

    Lachlan is also the CEO and executive chair of Fox Corporation, which runs America's Fox News. The cable network is a strident supporter of US President Donald Trump, who has appointed several of its stars to high-profile government roles since his re-election.

    James, Elisabeth and Prudence are all understood to be less conservative than Lachlan, and James had been particularly critical of the organisation's media outlets in the past. 

    He resigned from News Corporation's board in 2020 after criticising its newspapers' "ongoing denial of the role of climate change" in bushfires across Australia that year.

    He is also known to have taken issue with Fox News's coverage of conspiracy theories about voting machines in the 2020 US election, which Mr Trump lost to Joe Biden. In 2023, Fox paid $US788 million ($1.2 billion) to Dominion Voting Systems and acknowledged it had broadcast false claims about the voting-machine company. 

    © 2025 ABC Australian Broadcasting Corporation. All rights reserved

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