Rudy
Giuliani's Ties to Fox News
Judith Regan's lawsuit against News Corp.
alleges that Rupert Murdoch's firm, which owns Fox News, wants Giuliani to be president. A
look at links between the candidate and the company.
An excerpt from an article in salon.com by
Alex Koppelman and Erin Renzas
Salon photo composite of Judith Regan and Rudy Giuliani (AP and Reuters
images)
Nov. 15, 2007 | Of all the allegations contained in
former ReganBooks Publisher Judith Regan's lawsuit against her one-time employers at Rupert Murdoch's News Corp., the
most explosive is the first. Regan charges that News Corp. executives wanted to destroy
her reputation because she knew too much about her ex-boyfriend, former New York City
Police Commissioner Bernie Kerik, and that what she knew could be harmful to the
presidential hopes of Rudy Giuliani
-- whom she depicts as the preferred candidate of News Corp. and its subsidiary, Fox News. According to Regan's suit, "This
smear campaign was necessary to advance News Corp.'s political agenda, which has long
centered on protecting Rudy Giuliani's presidential
ambitions."
Regan and the married Kerik had a well-publicized
yearlong affair. Their assignations often took place in a lower Manhattan apartment that
had been specifically reserved for the use of workers in the aftermath of 9/11. After
Giuliani left the mayor's office on January 1, 2002, Kerik went to work for him as a
consultant at Giuliani Partners. Kerik and Regan broke up later in 2002. In December 2004,
according to Regan's complaint, when President Bush tapped Kerik, at Giuliani's
recommendation, to head the federal Department of Homeland Security,
Regan was pressured to keep quiet, and asked to lie on Kerik's behalf. "[A] senior
executive in the News Corp. organization told Regan that he believed she had information
about Kerik that, if disclosed, would harm Giuliani's presidential campaign. This
executive advised Regan to lie to, and to withhold information from, investigators
concerning Kerik. ... [D]efendants knew they would be protecting Giuliani if they could
preemptively discredit her."
This is not the first time that News Corp. has been
accused of having a political agenda. Fox News is often accused of favoring Republicans.
In the current presidential election cycle, however, there have also been repeated
suggestions, from critics on both the right and the left, that the network prefers
Giuliani over the other GOP contenders.
As it happens, Giuliani and News Corp. do have a history.
Giuliani has several personal and financial connections to News Corp. and Fox News --
beginning with Fox's top executive -- and those connections seem to have proven mutually
beneficial:
Roger Ailes: The head of Fox News, Ailes was a veteran
Republican operative long before he was a news executive, having worked as a media
consultant in the presidential campaigns of Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan and the first
President Bush. In 1989, he worked as a media consultant on the unsuccessful first mayoral
campaign of a former federal prosecutor named Rudy Giuliani, with whom he had bonded at
dinner parties over their shared admiration for Ronald Reagan. Since then, Giuliani and
Ailes have remained good friends. Giuliani officiated at Ailes' wedding and brought
presents to Ailes' room when Ailes was hospitalized in 1998. The New York Times has reported that aides to the two men say they don't see each other
often, but they did sit together at the White House Correspondents' Dinner in April 2007
-- which Giuliani attended as a guest of News Corp. (Ailes has also socialized with Bernie
Kerik.)
The Time Warner lawsuit: In 1994, according to the New
York Times, Giuliani prepared a speech for a reception honoring Ailes in which he wrote,
"Roger has played an important role in my own career." In 1996, Giuliani had an
opportunity to repay the favor. Fox News was launching, with Ailes at the helm, and Time Warner, which provided cable
service to 12 million homes nationwide, had decided it would not carry Fox News. Time
Warner was the dominant cable operator in New York City, meaning that not only would 1.1
million city homes not get Fox, but the fledgling network would go unseen by media
powerbrokers in the nation's media capital.
Three days after Murdoch learned of Time Warner's
decision, a call from Ailes to Giuliani set in motion a series of unprecedented moves in
favor of a cable network by the Giuliani administration. As calls and meetings continued
between Fox and city officials, including Giuliani, the Giuliani administration reportedly
threatened Time Warner executives with the loss of their cable franchise if the cable
provider didn't accept a deal in which the city would give up one of its own government
channels so Fox News could take the slot. (Some 30 other cable networks had tried and
failed to win channel space on Time Warner.) When Time Warner refused to take the deal,
the city announced that it would go ahead with the plan anyway and force the cable
provider to carry Fox News. A legal battle ensued.
Ultimately, the two warring parties made peace and Fox
won carriage, but not before a judge and an appeals panel both ruled against the city's
plan. In granting Time Warner a temporary injunction, a federal district court judge
issued a harsh rebuke to the Giuliani administration, saying the city had repeatedly
shifted the legal justifications for its stand, indicating that "the City does not
believe its own positions." The judge further wrote, "The City's purpose in
acting to compel Time Warner to give Fox one of its commercial channels was to reward a
friend... The very fact that the City chose Fox News out of all other news programs -- not
to mention the significant number of other programs which have been denied space on Time
Warner's commercial network -- is by itself substantial evidence that the City chose Fox
News based on its content."
Lobbying: Giuliani's connections to News Corp. extend to
his law and lobbying firm, Bracewell & Giuliani. Giuliani announced his partnership in
the firm previously known as Bracewell & Patterson in March 2005. Beginning the next
month, according to congressional lobbying disclosure records, the firm billed News Corp.
and DirecTV, which was then a subsidiary of News Corp., for $120,000 in federal lobbying
during 2005. The firm represented News Corp. on issues including regulations on violent
and indecent programming and the potential re-write of the 1996 Telecommunications Act. In
the years prior to Giuliani joining the firm, congressional records do not show any
lobbying work performed for News Corp.
Airtime: Earlier this year, a study by the political
journal Hotline found that Giuliani had been interviewed on Fox News during the first 196
days of 2007 for a total of 115 minutes, more than any other presidential contender, and
14 minutes more than the runner-up, the then-undeclared Fred Thompson.
Sean Hannity: In Fox's defense, the bulk of the time
Giuliani was on the network he was talking to Sean Hannity, the Long Island-bred cohost of
"Hannity & Colmes." And no wonder -- though Hannity claims not to be
supporting a candidate (a denial he was forced to make when Ariz. Sen. John McCain accused him on-air, albeit
obliquely, of supporting Giuliani), he flew to Ohio to introduce the former mayor at a campaign fundraiser in August. When a New York Times reporter asked a
Fox spokeswoman about the Hotline figures, she responded that Hannity makes his own
booking decisions. Hannity has also handled post-debate anchor duties for all three Fox
GOP debates held to date.
Cease-and-desist: In October, Fox lawyers sent a cease
and desist letter to John McCain's campaign after he included footage from Fox's October
21 Orlando debate in a TV commercial. The ad featured a McCain quip aimed at Senator
Clinton's push for a so-called "Woodstock museum." The letter demanded McCain
pull the ad and remove footage of the debate from his Web site, according to Talking Points Memo.
However, similar letters were not sent to two other GOP
presidential hopefuls who were also using footage from the Fox debate -- Rudy Giuliani and
Mitt Romney. After initial reports
showed that only McCain had been sent such an order, a Fox spokesperson told the New York
Times, "Our legal team has been alerted and there will be cease and desist
orders." Letters were sent to both the Romney and Giuliani campaigns, but they are
apparently not being heeded. Giuliani's Web site still makes liberal use of Fox footage,
including one clip
added at least a week after the date of the cease and desist letter. Romney's site also
continues to feature material from the debate.
Steve Forbes: Himself a former Republican presidential
candidate, the magazine magnate is now a national co-chair and senior policy advisor with
the Giuliani campaign. He's also, in the words of a Giuliani campaign press release,
"a frequent business commentator for Fox News Channel's 'Forbes on Fox.'" Though
that show is actually hosted by a Fox News employee, David Asman, its guests come from the
editorial staff of Forbes Magazine. Steve Forbes is both the editor-in-chief of Forbes
Magazine and the president and CEO of its publisher, Forbes, Inc.
NOW LOOK AT FOX'S REAL INTEREST!