Lachlan Murdock abruptly resigns from News Corp.
NEW YORK (AP) – Lachlan Murdoch abruptly resigned as a senior executive of News Corp. Friday, ending his father Rupert’s hopes that he would some day run the global media conglomerate. The younger Murdoch, who is 33 years old, will move back to Australia with his wife and son and remain a director of the company.
The unexpected move is sure to fan speculation over who will succeed Rupert Murdoch as CEO of News Corp. Murdoch is 74 years old but has not given any indication of when he plans to step aside.
Murdoch, whose family controls 30 percent of the company, has been grooming his sons as potential heirs to his throne, giving them greater degrees of responsibility. He has said he hoped that someone in his family would eventually run the company after him.
Lachlan had been seen as his father’s favorite to succeed him, though investors have been dubious that the younger Murdoch was ready to take the helm.
Lachlan’s departure puts more pressure on News Corp. to clarify its succession plans. For the moment, chief operating officer Peter Chernin is seen as the one who would run the company should Murdoch retire or become unable to serve as CEO.
Chernin, who is 54, is a highly regarded media executive whose name had been mentioned as a possible successor to outgoing Walt Disney Co. CEO Michael Eisner, before Robert Iger was tapped for that job. Chernin signed a five-year contract with News Corp. last year.
Lachlan had been deputy chief operating officer of the company since 2000, working closely with Chernin and overseeing News Corp.’s U.S. television stations, the New York Post and other businesses.
Rupert Murdoch said in a statement that he was “particularly saddened by my son’s decision.” He also said he “respected the professionalism and integrity that he has exhibited throughout his career” at the company.
Attention will now turn to Lachlan’s younger brother James, who runs BSkyB, a British satellite broadcasting business that is about 36 percent owned by News Corp.
James, who is 32, had been CEO of News Corp.’s Asian satellite broadcaster Star Group Ltd. and also held other senior posts at News Corp., including executive vice president.
James gave up his positions at News Corp. in 2003 as well as a seat on the company’s board when he took the reins at BSkyB. James’s appointment there had raised opposition from shareholders and led to accusations of nepotism.
Lachlan Murdoch began his career with News Corp. in his father’s native Australia in 1994. He began with cleaning presses at the Mirror newspaper, and took increasingly senior positions at the company’s Australian newspapers.
“I would like especially to thank my father for all he has taught me in business and in life,” Murdoch said in a statement. “It is now time for me to apply those lessons to the next phase of my career.”
Murdoch’s daughter Elisabeth, 36, left BSkyB in 2000 to set up her own television production company in England, and seems to have exited the running to succeed her father for now.
Lachlan’s departure comes shortly after Murdoch had taken steps to shore up his control of News Corp. Last fall Murdoch put in place a defensive “poison pill” measure after media investor John Malone unexpectedly doubled his voting stake in News Corp. to about 18 percent.
Malone is believed to be interested in winding down his stake in News Corp., although neither he nor Murdoch have given a clear indication of how or when that may happen.
Investors took the news of Murdoch’s departure in stride. News Corp.’s shares slipped 5 cents to $16.52 in afternoon trading on the New York Stock Exchange. Its shares have traded in a range of $15.61 to $34.85 over the past year.
News Corp. is one of the largest global media companies. Its properties include the Twentieth Century Fox movie studio, the Fox broadcast network, Fox News Channel, DirecTV and the HarperCollins book publishing unit.
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AP-ES-07-29-05 1358EDT