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Australia vs. Rupert Murdoch

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The MoJo Daily newsletter, Monday through Friday. ? ? January 30, 2024 Happy Tuesday! It’s

The MoJo Daily newsletter, Monday through Friday. [View in browser]( [Mother Jones Daily Newsletter](     January 30, 2024 Happy Tuesday! It’s James West here, deputy editor of Mother Jones. I also go by a jokey unofficial title, Senior Australia Editor, and with that hat on, I bring you a fascinating new investigation into my home country’s most notorious export: Rupert Murdoch. For someone growing up in Australia, Murdoch and his media were inescapable. Australia is where it all began, when he took his [dad’s Adelaide newspaper]( and grew it into a global empire, [as the story goes](. It’s also where his influence is still most keenly felt. Today, News Corp owns more than 100 newspapers, including several top tabloids that command more than half of the country’s readership, with circulations that many American editors would kill for. Even so, there’s been a fascinating change Downunder. While political leaders once came groveling, believing that Murdoch’s favor could swing an election their way, this doesn’t happen so much anymore. At Murdoch’s most dominant, he more often backed conservative leaders. But now, the left-wing Labor Party holds power in all but one of Australia’s states and runs the federal government too. How did this happen? And, if Australia has been able to shake itself free from Murdoch’s grip, could American democracy—still wracked by the radical (and radicalizing) Fox News—do the same? It’s the tantalizing prospect that [Australian journalist Sean Kelly]( explores in his [new, deeply reported story, “Australia vs. Rupert Murdoch,”]( published this week as part of our big look at American Oligarchy. (Remember, Rupert famously [became an American citizen in 1985]( to clear the way for US expansion.) Sean has long been my personal decoder for Aussie politics and media stories. Earlier in his career, I watched him rise through the ranks of politics to become a top adviser to former Prime Minister Kevin Rudd and his successor Julia Gillard. He’s now an accomplished journalist and columnist for the Sydney Morning Herald and the author of [the definitive book]( about the rise and fall of another recent prime minister, Scott Morrison. I’ll let Sean lay out the stakes: Suggestions that the Murdoch empire is declining in the place that Rupert first built it are tantalizing to his critics. That this alleged decline coincides with such a delicate handover—from all-powerful father to relatively untested son—may raise these hopes still higher: Perhaps this is the moment those terrified of Murdoch have been waiting for all these years. After all, if it can happen there, surely it could happen anywhere—perhaps even everywhere. Sean’s article serves up some killer quotes from another former PM, conservative Malcolm Turnbull, who unloads on Murdoch as a power-obsessed planet destroyer. “It’s hard to think of one person that has made a bigger contribution to delaying action on climate in the world,” Turnbull said, before laying a similar blame for America’s crackup with Murdoch: “Of course, Trump and January 6: wow. There isn’t a person alive today who has done more damage to the United States.” I won’t give it all away. Come for the dishy Murdoch palace drama. Stay for the big questions about democracy in 2024—when everything is at stake. This Murdoch investigation is just one part of our wide-ranging look at the rise of the American Oligarchy—and what it means for the rest of us. You can read all the pieces [here](. —James West P.S. We're hiring! We're looking for a superb researcher, writer, and fundraiser who cares about the dangers to our democracy and loves investigative journalism. Is that you or someone you know? Mother Jones and Reveal are looking for a senior foundations officer to lead our foundation revenue strategy. More information [here](. Advertisement [The Cancer Factory]( [Top Story] [Top Story]( [Australia vs. Rupert Murdoch]( What's the future of the aging mogul's global empire? Look to the place where it all began. BY SEAN KELLY SPONSORED CONTENT BY BEACON PRESS   Workers pay the toll for corporate greed with their lives. The Cancer Factory is the harrowing story of the Goodyear Tire and Rubber employees who developed bladder cancer after decades of on-the-job toxic chemical exposure. For many, the story will be a familiar one that reveals the shameful lack of protection our society affords its workers. [Click to learn more.]( [Trending] [Will Biden's pause of big gas export projects win back young voters?]( BY KRISTOFFER TIGUE AND KEERTI GOPAL   [Add Nikki Haley to the list of public figures who have been “swatted”]( BY ALI BRELAND   [A “Trumpier than Trump” disgraced West Virginia coal baron is running for Senate as a Democrat]( BY ALI BRELAND   [Haley responds to $83 million Trump verdict: "I absolutely trust the jury"]( BY INAE OH Advertisement [The Cancer Factory]( [Special Feature] [Special Feature]( [Martha’s Vineyard is being gutted by skyrocketing housing costs. Yes, you should care.]( The fight for affordable year-round housing in this elite summer destination offers lessons for dealing with a national crisis. BY THOMAS STACKPOLE [Fiercely Independent] Support from readers allows Mother Jones to do journalism that doesn't just follow the pack. [Donate]( Did you enjoy this newsletter? Help us out by [forwarding]( it to a friend or sharing it on [Facebook]( and [Twitter](. [Mother Jones]( [Donate]( [Donate Monthly]( [Subscribe]( This message was sent to {EMAIL}. To change the messages you receive from us, you can [edit your email preferences]( or [unsubscribe from all mailings.]( For advertising opportunities see our online [media kit.]( Were you forwarded this email? [Sign up for Mother Jones' newsletters today.]( [www.MotherJones.com]( PO Box 8539, Big Sandy, TX 75755

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