James Murdoch | |
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Murdoch in 2008 | |
| Born | James Rupert Jacob Murdoch (1972-12-13)13 December 1972 (age 53) |
| Citizenship |
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| Education | Harvard University (attended) |
| Board member of | Tesla, Inc. |
| Spouse | |
| Children | 3 |
| Parents |
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| Family | Murdoch |
James Rupert Jacob Murdoch (born 13 December 1972) is an American and British businessman. He is the younger son of media mogulRupert Murdoch and the formerchief executive officer (CEO) of21st Century Fox from 2015 to 2019.
He was the chairman and CEO for Europe and Asia ofNews Corporation until 2013 when it was split intoNews Corp and 21st Century Fox. He was formerly a director of News Corp and was a member of the office of the chairman. Until April 2012, he was the chairman and CEO ofSky plc, Europe and Asia, where he oversaw assets such asNews International (publisher ofThe News of the World newspaper),Sky Italia,Sky Deutschland, andSTAR TV.
Murdoch was executive chairman of News International from 2007. He previously held a non-executive chair atBritish Sky Broadcasting, in which News Corporation had a controlling minority stake. In April 2012, he was forced to resign as chairman of BSkyB in the wake of the ongoingphone hacking scandal, in which he was implicated and severely criticised in a parliamentary report. He was reappointed chairman of the company following its merger with its Italian and German sister companies to formSky plc.
In July 2020, he resigned from the board of News Corp due to disagreements with its editorial content and strategic direction. In 2021, Murdoch set up the Indian arm of his family office, Lupa Systems India, as a joint venture with businessmanUday Shankar.
As of September 2024[update], the whole Murdoch family is involved in a court case in the US in which James, his sisterElisabeth and half-sisterPrudence are challenging their father's bid to amend the family trust to ensure that his eldest son,Lachlan, retains control of News Corp and Fox Corp, rather than benefiting all of his six children, as is specified in the "irrevocable" terms of the trust.
James Rupert Jacob Murdoch[1] was born on 13 December 1972 at Wimbledon Hospital inWimbledon,London, England.[2][3] He is the fourth child of billionaire media mogulRupert Murdoch's six children, and the third with Scottish-born journalist and authorAnna Murdoch Mann (née Torv),[4] the others beingElisabeth andLachlan.[5]
As a youngster James was regarded as the brightest of the Murdoch children, but also considered something of a rebel.[6] He first came to public notice as a 15-year-old intern at the SydneyDaily Mirror but made headlines in the rivalThe Sydney Morning Herald after he was photographed asleep on a sofa at a press conference.[6]
Murdoch attendedHorace Mann School[6] in New York City. He then studied film and history atHarvard University, where he was a member of theHarvard Lampoon. He dropped out of university in 1995 without completing his studies to follow theGrateful Dead and set up ahip hop record label.[6][7] With university friends Brian Brater andJarret Myer, he backed the establishment ofRawkus Records, anindependent hip hop record label. The company was bought by News Corporation in 1998.[6]
In 1996, Murdoch joined News Corporation and was appointed chairman ofFestival Records. He took charge of News Corporation's internet operations, where he invested in a series of ventures, including financial websiteTheStreet and the short-lived online music site Whammo, with mixed results.[6] He also continued to contribute cartoons to US magazineGear.[citation needed]
He is credited with sparking his father's interest in the internet, and he reportedly tried to persuade his father to buy internet companyPointCast for US$450 million. It was subsequently sold to another company for $7 million.[6]
After installing a new management team at Festival, Murdoch purchased the controlling 51% share ofMushroom Records in 1999, and the merged group was rebranded as Festival Mushroom Records (FMR).[8] It was at first thought that News Corporation might use FMR as the foundation of a new international entertainment company, but FMR struggled while Murdoch was in charge and after his departure its fortunes declined rapidly. FMR was closed in late 2005 and its remaining assets were sold: the recording catalogue was sold to the Australian division ofWarner Music for A$10 million in October 2005, and the publishing division was sold toMichael Gudinski a month later, for an undisclosed sum.[9]
In May 2000, Murdoch was appointed chairman and chief executive of News Corporation's ailing Asian satellite serviceStar Television, which at the time was losing £100 million a year, and he moved to Hong Kong.[6]
In February 2003, Murdoch became a director of BSkyB. Later that year, he controversially became CEO of BSkyB, in which News Corporation owned a controlling minority stake. His appointment sparked accusations ofnepotism, with some commentators and shareholders feeling that the job had not been opened to outsiders and that Murdoch was too young and inexperienced to run one of the UK's top companies[10] He was an executive vice-president of News Corporation (the controlling shareholder of BSkyB) and served on the board of directors ofNews Datacom and of News Corporation.[6]
Following the surprise resignation of his brotherLachlan Murdoch from his executive positions at News Corporation in July 2005, James was viewed as his father's heir-apparent.[11]

In December 2007, Murdoch stepped down as CEO fromBSkyB and was appointed non-executive chairman of the company (a position formerly held by his father, Rupert).[12]
In a related announcement, Murdoch also took "direct responsibility for the strategic and operational development ofNews Corporation's television, newspaper, and related digital assets in Europe, Asia, and the Middle East."[13] This included holdings such asNews International,Sky Italia,STAR Group ltd and possibly other News Corporation relatedassets. He was based atNews International's headquarters inWapping,East London.[citation needed]
In February 2009, Murdoch was appointed a non-executive director with the British pharmaceutical companyGlaxoSmithKline.[14]
In August 2009, Murdoch delivered theJames MacTaggart Memorial Lecture at theEdinburgh International Television Festival, in which he attacked theBBC and UK media regulatorOfcom calling the BBC's expansion "chilling" and also said: "In this all-media marketplace, the expansion of state-sponsored journalism is a threat to the plurality and independence of news provision, which are so important for our democracy."[11][15] The BBC chairman,Sir Michael Lyons officially responded, "We have to be careful not to reduce the whole of broadcasting to some simple economic transactions. TheBBC's public purposes stress the importance of the well-tested principles of educating and informing, and an impartial contribution to debate in the UK."[16]
In April 2010, Murdoch and his associateRebekah Brooks entered the offices ofThe Independent to complain about an advertisement campaign by the newspaper.[17]
Until April 2012, he was the chairman and CEO ofSky plc, Europe and Asia, where he oversaw assets such asNews International (publisher ofThe News of the World newspaper),Sky Italia,Sky Deutschland, andSTAR TV.[citation needed]
He was executive chairman of News International from 2007[18] until February 2012.[19] He previously held a non-executive chair atBritish Sky Broadcasting, in which News Corporation had a controlling minority stake. In April 2012, he was forced to resign as chairman of BSkyB in the wake of the ongoingphone hacking scandal, in which he was implicated.[20]
In April 2014, it was announced that Murdoch would join the board of advertising start-up True[X] Media.[21]
In June 2015, his father, Rupert, announced that he would be leaving his position as CEO of21st Century Fox and James would take over the position.[22]
In January 2016, Murdoch became the chairman of Sky, Britain's subscription broadcaster.[23]
In July 2017, Murdoch became an independent director on the board ofTesla.[24]
In October 2018, Murdoch left Sky afterComcast took the majority control of the company.[25]
In March 2019, 21st Century Fox was sold toThe Walt Disney Company, ending Murdoch's tenure as CEO.[26]
Murdoch was a director of News Corp in August 2019.[27] In July 2020, he resigned from the board. His resignation letter stated that his resignation was "due to disagreements over certain editorial content published by the company's news outlets and certain other strategic decisions".[28][29][30] He criticised the "ongoing denial of the role ofclimate change" seen in the Australian outlets, following the particularly devastating2019–20 Australian bushfire season.[5]
In 2021, Murdoch set up the Indian arm of his family office, Lupa Systems India, as a joint venture with businessmanUday Shankar.[31] The aim of the joint venture was to focus on media, education, and the healthcare sectors in Asia, particularly India. In May 2022, Lupa India (renamed to Bodhi Tree Systems) announced a $600 million investment in the test-prep company Allen Career Institute Private Limited for a 36% stake, and completed the deal in July.[32] In April 2023, Bodhi Tree acquired a 13% stake in theReliance-owned media and entertainment company,Viacom18, and subsequently increased it to 16% by August 2023.[33] In February 2024, Viacom18 andDisney-Star India entered into a joint venture to form an $8.5 billion entity.[34]
On 7 July 2011, James Murdoch announced the closure of the British tabloid newspaper theNews of the World in the wake of aphone hacking scandal.[35]
On 19 July 2011, along with his father, Rupert, he appeared at a hearing of the CommonsCulture, Media and Sport Committee. He appeared once again before the same committee on 10 November 2011. James maintained that until late in 2010 he was unaware that more than one "rogue reporter" from theNews of the World tabloid had been involved in phone hacking.[36] This statement waschallenged by the formal legal manager and editor for the newspaper, who claimed they had informed James of the"Transcript for Neville" email, a potential "smoking gun" indicating several of the newspaper's journalists may have been involved, during the settlement negotiations with Gorden Taylor in 2008 and alerted him to the potential liability if this document became public.[citation needed] On 22 July 2011, Britain's prime minister,David Cameron, said that Murdoch had "questions to answer in Parliament," a day after former top executives of theNews of the World accused the News Corporation executive of giving "mistaken" evidence.[37]
In November 2011, British newspapers reported that Murdoch had resigned as chairman of News Group Newspapers, the holding company aboveThe Sun,News of the World and Times Newspapers Ltd, itself owner ofThe Times andThe Sunday Times. News Group Newspapers is the company subject to a series of lawsuits, all related to the phone hacking scandal. James Murdoch's resignation was also said to be related to the 12 October 2011 resignation[clarification needed] of anotherDow Jones executive, Andrew Langhoff, after a company whistleblower revealed an editorial scam and questionable circulation dealings atThe Wall Street Journal Europe.[38][39]
In February 2012, News Corp announced that Murdoch would be stepping down as executive chairman of its British newspaper arm. The company said he would remain deputy chief operating officer of News Corp and focus on the company's international TV business,[40] including continued responsibility for BSkyB.[41] He stepped down also from the GlaxoSmithKline board.[42] In April 2012, he stood down as chairman of BSkyB, but remained on the board.[43] He was replaced as chairman byNicholas Ferguson.[citation needed] In May 2012, a highly critical UK Parliamentary report said that Murdoch "showed wilful ignorance of the extent of phone-hacking" and found him "guilty of an astonishing lack of curiosity" over the issue.[44] It went on to say that both Murdoch and his father "should ultimately be prepared to take responsibility" for wrongdoing at theNews of the World and News International.[45] In September 2012, Murdoch was criticised by the British Office of Communications (Ofcom), which concluded that he "repeatedly fell short of the conduct to be expected of as a chief executive and chairman" and that his lack of action in relation to phone hacking was "difficult to comprehend and ill-judged".[46]
In September 2024, the whole Murdoch family is involved in a court case inReno,Nevada, in which James, his sisterElisabeth and half-sisterPrudence MacLeod are challenging their father's bid to amend the family trust to ensure that his eldest son,Lachlan, retains control of News Corp and Fox Corp, rather than benefiting all of his six children, as is specified in the "irrevocable" terms of the trust. According toThe New York Times, Rupert wants his companies to remain politically conservative, and sees his other children as too politically liberal.[5][47]
The irrevocable family trust was set up after Rupert and Anna Murdoch's divorce in 1999, to hold the family's 28.5% stake in News Corp. It relates only to the children born before then, giving them equal say in the fate of the business after Rupert's death.[48] Chloe and Grace Murdoch, Rupert's children with third wifeWendi Deng, will have no say in the business,[49] although will share the stock proceeds.[48] The case follows Rupert's attempt to change the trust in 2023, and the Nevadaprobate commissioner's finding that he was allowed to amend the trust "if he is able to show he is acting in good faith and for the sole benefit of his heirs".[47] Rupert Murdoch is arguing interference by the other siblings would cause a financial loss to Fox, and therefore "in their own best interests if they have their votes taken away from them".[50] He argues that preserving the outlet's conservative editorial stance against interference by the more politically moderate siblings would better protect its commercial value.[48]
The case led to James, as well as sisters Elisabeth and Prudence, becoming estranged from their father; none of the three attended his wedding to his fifth wife, Elena Zhukova, in June 2024.[47]
A $3.3 billion settlement was reached on September 8, 2025, granting Lachlan control of the News Corp. and Fox Corp. media empire, "until at least 2050", with James receiving one third of the proceeds.[51][52]
Murdoch is a British citizen by birth and a naturalised US citizen.[53] Apart from full siblings Elisabeth and Lachlan Murdoch, he has three half-siblings, including an elder half-sisterPrudence, and two younger half-sisters by his father's third marriage toWendi Deng, Grace and Chloe.[5]
Murdoch was instrumental in the formation ofSky Procycling and is a keen cyclist himself.[54] He maintains an early morning gym routine and has a black belt inkarate.[55][56]
Murdoch marriedKathryn Hufschmid in 2000,[57] and they have three children: Anneka, Walter, and Emerson. Kathryn worked for theClinton Climate Initiative from 2006 to 2011, a charitable foundation set up by the former U.S. president,Bill Clinton.[4][58]
Since 2014, James and Kathryn have run the Quadrivium Foundation,[59][60] which supports "initiatives that address the root causes of problems and where single actions can create multiple positive outcomes". It is focused on five key areas: democracy, technology and society, scientific understanding,climate change, and the health of the world's oceans. It invests in evidence-based solutions to problems.[61]
Murdoch has donated money to theClinton Foundation, the nonprofit organisation run byChelsea, Bill, andHillary Clinton.[62]
In 2020, Murdoch and his wife each donated US$615,000 to theBiden campaign.[63] In September 2024, he was one of 88 American corporate leaders who signed anopen letter endorsing vice-presidentKamala Harris for president.[5]
He has been highly critical of Fox News' promotion ofDonald Trump's false claims ofelection fraud after he lost the 2020 election. Fox was subsequently successfully sued for defamation, losing over $US787 million in costs.[5]