Thursday August 2, 3:07 AM
WSJ editorials defend Murdoch as new boss
NEW YORK, Aug 1 (Reuters) - Rupert Murdoch's deal to buy
Dow Jones & Co Inc. won support on Wednesday in the
editorial pages of his long-coveted Wall Street Journal, which
defended its new boss and tasked him with upholding more than a
century of journalistic principle.
The Journal said there was no doubt who was really in
charge of Dow Jones despite a hard-won agreement with its
controlling Bancroft family to create independent oversight of
the news.
"This isn't intended to be some heat shield protecting
Journal editors from their new owner," the Journal's editorial
board wrote, referring to a five-member committee charged with
protecting editorial independence. "We know enough about
capitalism to know that there is no separating ownership and
control."
The agreement for a $5.6 billion buyout, which includes
debt, followed three months of wrangling between Murdoch's News
Corp and the Bancroft family, who questioned the
76-year-old media mogul's intentions for one of the most prized
U.S. business publications.
The Journal editorial board pointed to The New York Times
and the Financial Times, two rivals likely to feel the pressure
from a Murdoch-owned Dow Jones, as "especially aggressive" in
doubting his ability to separate news coverage from his own
interests.
"Readers can judge if the tears these papers and their
writers claim to shed for the Journal's future are real, or of
the crocodile variety," the editorial said.
Many Journal reporters and other Dow Jones employees had
also opposed Murdoch's bid over fears that he would tarnish the
Journal's image.
In an effort to ease such concerns, Journal publisher
Gordon Crovitz also issued a letter published alongside the
editorial piece.
"As owner, Mr. Murdoch will be fully accountable for the
company," he wrote. "This is a strong protection for readers
because it's the reputation of our journalism that drives so
much of the value of Dow Jones."
A CHANGE OF DYNASTIES
News Corp announced the deal early on Wednesday, adding a
powerful news outlet to its sprawling media empire that spans
the Fox television stations, MySpace online social network and
Times of London newspaper.
Murdoch has said that Dow Jones's news operations, which
also include Dow Jones Newswires, the Barron's business weekly
and MarketWatch financial site, would also fuel a new Fox
business channel to be launched later this year. Dow Jones
competes with Reuters Group Plc on financial news.
News Corp did not outline the future direction of Dow Jones
and its top executives. In media interviews, Murdoch has raised
such ideas as offering the Wall Street Journal for free online,
building up its U.S. political coverage and aggressively
recruiting the world's top business journalists.
Dow Jones shares rose 82 cents, or 1.4 percent, to $58.20
on the New York Stock Exchange while News Corp gained 12 cents,
or 0.6 percent, at $21.00.
Bancroft family members holding about 37 percent of Dow
Jones's voting power agreed on Tuesday to support the deal
after failing to rouse competing bids. That represents more
than half of the 64 percent voting shares held by the family.
Dow Jones shareholders still must approve the buyout, but
their support is expected given the 65 percent premium Murdoch
offered in his $60-per-share deal.
A Bancroft family member or another person agreed to by
both sides will be appointed to the News Corp. board.
The deal is expected to close in the fourth quarter and
carries a $165 million termination fee.
A commissioner on the Federal Communications Commission
said on Wednesday the regulating body should take a careful
look at the deal and its impact on U.S. media diversity.
The Bancrofts are among a group of U.S. newspaper families
that includes the Sulzberger clan, who run The New York Times
Co. , and the Chandlers, who cashed out of Tribune Co.
earlier this year.
Unlike their peers, the Bancrofts refrained from
interfering with the Journal's news operations. But that
remoteness -- as readers flock to the Internet for news -- led
to criticism that the family was neglecting the company.
In selling to Murdoch, the Bancrofts pass Dow Jones to
another media dynasty. Murdoch, who built News Corp from two
Australian papers, also controls his global media empire and
sees its future someday in the hands of his children.
(Additional reporting by Megan Davies)
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