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The real-life Logan Roy, News Corp. and Fox TV boss Rupert Murdoch, just lost a battle straight out of the HBO series Succession. A representative of the probate court in Reno, Nevada, ruled that the 93-year-old media mogul can’t change the terms of an irrevocable trust he created, blocking Rupert’s effort to hand control of his companies to favored son, Lachlan, the most conservative of his siblings. Murdoch’s other kids, James, Elisabeth and Prudence, sued to block the change. Murdoch assembled the world’s most powerful conservative media empire, which includes Fox News, The Wall Street Journal, The New York Post, and newspapers and TV outlets in Australia and Britain. If Murdoch can’t lock in Lachlan’s control, his right-wing legacy could be in jeopardy with the empire broken up and its influence lost.
The representative, known as a commissioner, said that Rupert and Lachlan—and their representative to the trust, former Attorney General Bill Barr, had acted in bad faith when they tried to amend the trust, which splits control of the empire evenly among all four children after Rupert dies. The commissioner, Edward Gorman, called the plan to change the trust a “carefully crafted charade” to “permanently cement Lachlan Murdoch’s executive roles” inside the empire “regardless of the impacts such control would have over the companies or the beneficiaries” of the trust.
Rupert and Lachlan, Gorman said, had become worried James might rally his sisters and launch a coup against Lachlan, changing the company’s editorial slant. Gorman noted that it was an episode of Succession that got the Murdoch children thinking about how to keep life from imitating television, and Elisabeth’s attorney Mark Devereaux, wrote a “Succession Memorandum” aimed at avoiding a post-mortem calamity. Instead, it just moved the whole dispute forward. Gorman’s recommendation now goes to Reno’s probate court for a final decision.
Watch Big Business This Week on Cheddar—and YouTube!Elon’s WorldThe numbers are in from the Federal Election Commission, and it appears that Elon Musk has spent more money on political campaigns than any single U.S. citizen. Musk spent $260 million to support Donald Trump’s election bid, including funding a political action committee called RBG PAC, which claimed (falsely) that Trump and the late and feisty liberal Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg were of one mind on abortion. • Musk is warning that he’ll bankroll primary challengers to GOP electeds who stand in the way of his Department of Government Efficiency. “Elon and Vivek talked about having a naughty list and a nice list for members of Congress and senators and how we vote and how we’re spending the American people’s money,” said Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, the Georgia Republican. • The Washington Post did some digging, and found that the end of Tesla’s so-called Model 2 is tied to a shift in Musk’s attitude toward climate change. As the Post reported, Musk called for a “popular uprising” against the fossil fuel industry in a 2016 film. At Tesla, every internal slide presentation had to include figures from former Vice President Al Gore’s documentary “An Inconvenient Truth,” citing rising carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere, as a reminder of Tesla’s mission. But then came Trump, and Musk axed the cheap car, saying he needed the cash to buy AI chips from Nvidia to power luxury sedans and the Optimus humanoid robot. Musk now says the existential risks from climate-related disasters have been overstated. The Post says his views were influenced by the “right-wing universe he has come to inhabit online, and in real life in Texas.” • Musk has trotted out his 4-year-old son, X, posting a video of the tyke on the eponymous platform repeating clearly rehearsed answers to daddy’s prompts. “What should I do?” asks Musk. “Help America,” replies the tot. “And?” prompts Dad. The kid’s eyes shift away from the camera, and after a long moment he replies: “Help Trump.” • Luigi Mangione, the 26-year scion of a conservative Maryland political dynasty and the alleged killer of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson in Manhattan last week, was apparently a fan of Musk, praising Musk’s “committment to long-term civilizational success” on his own X account. • A series of back-and-forth tweets between Musk and Sundar Pichai, CEO of Google parent Alphabet, about the advantages of solar energy, both on earth and in space, might signal that Musk could get the president-elect interested in solar power again. Despite his pro-oil rhetoric, Trump’s policies were great for solar in his first term. As Fortune pointed out, Invesco’s Solar ETF soared 544% during Trump’s presidency, while the S&P 500 rose 70%.
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The Short Stack
By CheddarThe real-life Logan Roy, News Corp. and Fox TV boss Rupert Murdoch, just lost a battle straight out of the HBO series Succession. A representative of the probate court in Reno, Nevada, ruled that the 93-year-old media mogul can’t change the terms of an irrevocable trust he created, blocking Rupert’s effort to hand control of his companies to favored son, Lachlan, the most conservative of his siblings. Murdoch’s other kids, James, Elisabeth and Prudence, sued to block the change. Murdoch assembled the world’s most powerful conservative media empire, which includes Fox News, The Wall Street Journal, The New York Post, and newspapers and TV outlets in Australia and Britain. If Murdoch can’t lock in Lachlan’s control, his right-wing legacy could be in jeopardy with the empire broken up and its influence lost.
The representative, known as a commissioner, said that Rupert and Lachlan—and their representative to the trust, former Attorney General Bill Barr, had acted in bad faith when they tried to amend the trust, which splits control of the empire evenly among all four children after Rupert dies. The commissioner, Edward Gorman, called the plan to change the trust a “carefully crafted charade” to “permanently cement Lachlan Murdoch’s executive roles” inside the empire “regardless of the impacts such control would have over the companies or the beneficiaries” of the trust.
Rupert and Lachlan, Gorman said, had become worried James might rally his sisters and launch a coup against Lachlan, changing the company’s editorial slant. Gorman noted that it was an episode of Succession that got the Murdoch children thinking about how to keep life from imitating television, and Elisabeth’s attorney Mark Devereaux, wrote a “Succession Memorandum” aimed at avoiding a post-mortem calamity. Instead, it just moved the whole dispute forward. Gorman’s recommendation now goes to Reno’s probate court for a final decision.
Watch Big Business This Week on Cheddar—and YouTube!Elon’s WorldThe numbers are in from the Federal Election Commission, and it appears that Elon Musk has spent more money on political campaigns than any single U.S. citizen. Musk spent $260 million to support Donald Trump’s election bid, including funding a political action committee called RBG PAC, which claimed (falsely) that Trump and the late and feisty liberal Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg were of one mind on abortion. • Musk is warning that he’ll bankroll primary challengers to GOP electeds who stand in the way of his Department of Government Efficiency. “Elon and Vivek talked about having a naughty list and a nice list for members of Congress and senators and how we vote and how we’re spending the American people’s money,” said Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, the Georgia Republican. • The Washington Post did some digging, and found that the end of Tesla’s so-called Model 2 is tied to a shift in Musk’s attitude toward climate change. As the Post reported, Musk called for a “popular uprising” against the fossil fuel industry in a 2016 film. At Tesla, every internal slide presentation had to include figures from former Vice President Al Gore’s documentary “An Inconvenient Truth,” citing rising carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere, as a reminder of Tesla’s mission. But then came Trump, and Musk axed the cheap car, saying he needed the cash to buy AI chips from Nvidia to power luxury sedans and the Optimus humanoid robot. Musk now says the existential risks from climate-related disasters have been overstated. The Post says his views were influenced by the “right-wing universe he has come to inhabit online, and in real life in Texas.” • Musk has trotted out his 4-year-old son, X, posting a video of the tyke on the eponymous platform repeating clearly rehearsed answers to daddy’s prompts. “What should I do?” asks Musk. “Help America,” replies the tot. “And?” prompts Dad. The kid’s eyes shift away from the camera, and after a long moment he replies: “Help Trump.” • Luigi Mangione, the 26-year scion of a conservative Maryland political dynasty and the alleged killer of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson in Manhattan last week, was apparently a fan of Musk, praising Musk’s “committment to long-term civilizational success” on his own X account. • A series of back-and-forth tweets between Musk and Sundar Pichai, CEO of Google parent Alphabet, about the advantages of solar energy, both on earth and in space, might signal that Musk could get the president-elect interested in solar power again. Despite his pro-oil rhetoric, Trump’s policies were great for solar in his first term. As Fortune pointed out, Invesco’s Solar ETF soared 544% during Trump’s presidency, while the S&P 500 rose 70%.
What do you think of Big Business This Week? Tell us how you really feel in this survey!
The Usual SuspectsGet Big Business This Week in your inbox every week—and read it before everybody else! Sign up today.
The Short Stack