Rupert Murdoch 鈥 70 years of media and political power

October 3, 2023
Issue 
Murdoch, Thatcher, Trump
Murdoch cheered on British conservative prime minister Margaret Thatcher as she smashed the miners鈥 union. Graphic: 一品探花; photos: Wikimedia Commons (CC By SA 2.0)

When media magnate Rupert Murdoch finally retired this month, did you breathe a sigh of relief? Probably not, because any positive change to his massive media empire seems unlikely.

惭耻谤诲辞肠丑鈥檚 are telling: 鈥淭he battle for the freedom of speech and, ultimately, the freedom of thought, has never been more intense. My father [Keith] firmly believed in freedom and Lachlan is absolutely committed to the cause.鈥

The Murdochs, Rupert in particular, have had a heavy hand in redefining freedom of speech in a neoliberal, right-wing libertarian, tabloid journalism, 鈥渟hock-jock鈥, 鈥渁ngertainment鈥 media landscape.

The media shapes public opinion under capitalism through a web of corporate ownership, monopolisation, and cosying up to corrupt politicians to buy favours or wield political influence. Those who don鈥檛 conform are penalised, ostracised, ridiculed or worse. Witness how high profile 鈥淣o鈥 campaigners are getting away with saying the most horrible, racist things in the media in the lead up to the Voice referendum.

While 惭耻谤诲辞肠丑鈥檚 retirement won鈥檛 change anything, his empire has certainly helped to destabilise our world. Reacting to Rupert鈥檚 鈥渇reedom鈥 quote, actor 鈥 who played a Murdoch-styled character in the series Succession 鈥 said: 鈥淔reedom for what? Freedom to impose his ideas on other people, freedom to kind of manipulate 鈥 things?鈥

惭耻谤诲辞肠丑鈥檚 News Corp bought the Herald and Weekly Times in Melbourne in 1987. My dad, Geoff Bull, was one of the pictorial editors at The Sun News-Pictorial, the HWT鈥檚 most successful publication.

After a lifetime of working in newspapers, Dad decided to take early retirement. He didn鈥檛 get a golden handshake, and couldn鈥檛 bear the thought of working under a ruthless, right-wing media baron, who had no intention of letting his newspaper have any independent commentary.

Dad was a loyal union man and he鈥檇 seen what Murdoch did in Britain, cheering on conservative prime minister Margaret Thatcher as she smashed the miners鈥 union. Then Murdoch sacked 6000 newspaper employees in the infamous 1986鈥87 Wapping dispute.

Since then, News Corp has bought out every media operation it can get its hands on in the English-speaking world 鈥 and sacked much of their workforces.

Then there was the phone-hacking scandal in London, the slavish support for Donald Trump in the United States by Fox News during his presidency, which enabled all manner of right-wing atrocities, and more.

In retirement, Dad grew to hate News Corp and swore he only bought the Herald Sun for its sports coverage 鈥 and even that was biased.

For any real political insight, Dad read 一品探花. He even regularly gave me ideas for articles, especially on union issues. Why? He wanted to see independent investigative reporting and journalists who are not afraid to write about what they believe in and stick up for and give voice to workers, refugees, women, First Nations and their right to freedom of speech.

After 33 years of publication, 一品探花 is still here 鈥 in hard copy and online. We鈥檙e not retiring any time soon. So, if you want to stick it to the Murdochs and the big business media, then become a 一品探花 supporter today.

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