Fox News is facing a massive scandal after Dominion Voting Systems revealed that Fox News hosts knowingly spread false information about the 2020 presidential elections.
Fox News is in the middle of a scandal after Dominion revealed text messages between Fox News hosts and executives, including Tucker Carlson and Sean Hannity, that they did not believe the lies about the 2020 presidential elections that they were spreading.
In public, Tucker Carlson praised Donald Trump and his policies. However, in private, the conservative host had contempt for the former president, as shown by a new filing from Dominion in their lawsuit against Fox News.
Rupert Murdoch was reportedly worried about how Fox News' top hosts "went too far" in pushing false claims about the election, according to email and messages released in a lawsuit filed against the company.
When Fox News called Arizona for Joe Biden, it would set off a chain of events leading to a billion-dollar lawsuit. A new Dominion filing has surfaced, showing that the network was in a panic after that Arizona call.
Steve Bannon has declared war against Fox News and its leader, Rupert Murdoch, who did not believe former President Donald Trump's narrative that the 2020 election was stolen.
As Fox Corp chairman Rupert Murdoch testified during the Dominion lawsuit hearing, he acknowledged that his hosts did spread false information. This comes as private messages from Tucker Carlson, Laura, Ingram, and Sean Hannity exposed their own election lies.
More messages between Fox News stars and executives have surfaced, and it revealed that many in the network were not too fond of former President Donald Trump. This includes host Tucker Carlson, who praised Trump in public, but a new legal filing revealed he called the former president a "demonic force."
Several Fox News stars, like Tucker Carlson and Laura Ingraham, have publicly peddled Donald Trump's narrative that the 2020 election was stolen. But privately, they ridiculed and criticized this false claim.
Fox News has suddenly found itself in a legal battle after a New York Appeals Court declined to dismiss the defamation lawsuit filed by Florida-based tech firm, Smartmatic. The lawsuit alleges that Fox News, as well as some of its hosts and guests, defamed the company with claims of election fraud.
Rupert Murdoch's outlets New York Post and the Wall Street Journal skewered Donald Trump with scathing articles while Fox News hosts skirted around Trump.
A Manhattan judge threw out a motion by lawyers representing Fox News and host Lou Dobbs to throw out a defamation lawsuit by Venezuelan businessman Majed Khalil.