News Corp. Hacking Scandal

Opinion Brief

Time for Rupert Murdoch to resign?

Rumors are flying that News Corp.'s board may try to move past a disastrous phone-hacking scandal by picking a new leader

A man wearing a Rupert Murdoch mask protests outside Britain's parliament on Tuesday: Some commentators believe News Corp. should force Murdoch to step down as CEO in the wake of a phone-hacking scandal.

A man wearing a Rupert Murdoch mask protests outside Britain's parliament on Tuesday: Some commentators believe News Corp. should force Murdoch to step down as CEO in the wake of a phone-hacking scandal. Photo: REUTERS/Olivia Harris SEE ALL 13 PHOTOS

Best Opinion:  Fortune, Guardian, LA Times

Bloomberg reported this week that News Corp.'s board had discussed whether to replace the company's scandal-plagued leader, Rupert Murdoch, with COO Chase Carey. So far, News Corp. is insisting that Murdoch, who denied responsibility for the News of the World phone-hacking mess in testimony to British Parliament on Tuesday, is staying put. No matter what happens, Murdoch will largely remain in control, because he owns 40 percent of the company's voting stock. But would it be better for the company and its shareholders if he stepped aside as the media empire's figurehead?

Yes. Murdoch's resignation is the only way to restore accountability: "Clearly, the company needs to clean house," says Eleanor Bloxham at Fortune. That means updating the board of directors, because it failed to "look into serious allegations" it knew about for years. But it also means Murdoch should give up either his CEO spot or his position as chairman of the board. That's not just a way to soothe shareholders — it's just good corporate governance to make sure the company isn't a one-man show.
"What's in store for Rupert Murdoch?"

No. The company trusts Murdoch's leadership: Murdoch did nothing wrong, says Thomas Perkins, one of News Corp.'s independent directors, as quoted by Britain's Guardian. He was misled "by very bad people at a very low level in the organization," just as the board of directors itself was. The board has faith in Murdoch's leadership, and this scandal doesn't change that.
"News Corp shares rally on Rupert Murdoch replacement rumors"

News Corp. should dump its newspapers before Murdoch: "Murdoch's Achilles' heel has always been his unabashed love of newspapers," says Joe Flint at the Los Angeles Times. Investors hate everything about newspapers, and they're a drag on News Corp.'s stock price. Now that the phone-hacking scandal has forced Murdoch to close News of the World, the best way to get a fresh start is "to stop the presses that threaten the family empire."
"Phone-hacking scandal could force Murdoch to let go of newspapers"

 
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opinion brief

Hacking scandal: Rupert Murdoch's 'crocodile tears'

The media mogul embarks on an apology tour, with full-page newspaper ads and a personal visit to a key phone-hacking victim. Will it help News Corp. survive?

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Rupert Murdoch's widening phone-hacking and bribery scandal takes down his top U.K. lieutenant, dealing his media empire another body blow

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The seemingly non-stop scandal engulfing Rupert Murdoch's media companies claimed its two most high-profile trophies on Sunday, with the surprise arrest of Murdoch lieutenant Rebekah Brooks, and the resignation of Britain's top police official, Sir Paul Stephenson... More

opinion brief

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Murdoch's U.K. papers have been plagued by phone-hacking allegations, and most U.S. news outlets are all over the story — with a few notable exceptions

The phone-hacking scandal roiling Rupert Murdoch's media empire is making headlines all over the world... but not at Murdoch's Fox News.

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Will the feds investigate News Corp. over phone hacking?

Sen. Jay Rockefeller (D-W.Va.) wants to probe whether Murdoch and Co.'s wrongdoing extended to American shores

Sen. Jay Rockefeller's (D-W.Va.) call to investigate Rupert Murdoch's News Corp. is gaining popularity on Capitol Hill.

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How Rupert Murdoch's hacking scandal could infect his news empire

The News Corp. tycoon has shut down the News of the World and rushed to London to do damage control, but where will it stop? Is Fox News in danger?

Rupert Murdoch is doing damage control in London as news of more alleged hacking targets, from Prime Minister Gordon Brown to Sept. 11 victims, surfaces.

The British phone-hacking scandal that brought down Rupert Murdoch's storied tabloid News of the World is spreading like wildfire to other News Corp. newspapers including The Sun and The Sunday Times. Among the newly reported high-profile hacking targets: former... More

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