Extract from ABC News
'Everyone likes a soap opera'
The media's fascination over the years with the succession battle within the family — fuelled in part by Rupert Murdoch's frequent references to the children needing to prove themselves — has clearly been a source of irritation for the Murdoch siblings.
"Speculation that we must all be thinking about what may or may not happen in 20 or 30 years' time, it's gotten to a point where it's boring," Lachlan Murdoch said in a rare interview for the ABC's Dynasties program in 2001.
In 2012, Elisabeth Murdoch was asked directly whether succession was an issue in the family. She denied that she and her brothers ever talked about it, adding: "It's more speculated upon than I think it merits. Everyone sort of likes the idea of a soap opera. And the reality is really not that. We're a normal family. We just have a bit of a spotlight on us."
It's widely believed that for a long time, the Murdoch siblings were close.
Eric Beecher recalls visiting the Murdoch household when they were in their teens. "It just struck me that a family that was so abnormal in so many ways in terms of its power and its wealth could be such a normal family behind closed doors."
They were frequently pictured together at business meetings and family gatherings, including Rupert's wedding to Jerry Hall in London in 2016.
Before news of the courtroom challenge to the family trust broke, speculation about James, Elisabeth and Prudence leading a palace coup after Rupert's death seemed far-fetched.
Elisabeth, who appears happy working for Sister, the production company she co-founded in 2019, was considered a peacemaker within the family. Close to her father and with no dog in the fight, she tended to keep her thoughts on the family's media assets to herself, although she did publicly distance herself from James and her father following the phone-hacking scandal that engulfed the Murdochs' UK operation in 2011.
Prudence has never shown much interest in the family business, although she is capable of making her presence felt. In 1999 she threw a very public tantrum after reading a story in which Rupert referred to his "three children". She contacted a journalist from rival media company Fairfax to say how hurt she was, with the resulting story appearing on the front page of The Sydney Morning Herald on the morning of Lachlan's wedding to Sarah O'Hare.
It's Lachlan and James who seemed to have the trickiest relationship, perhaps not surprising given their closeness in age and seemingly disparate temperaments. When Lachlan returned to the family fold in 2014 after nine years of self-imposed exile, he and James worked alongside each other in an uneasy alliance.
While Lachlan is frequently described as more conservative than his father, James is more liberal and growing tension between the two became public following the sale of a big chunk of the family business to Disney in 2018. James left it to Rupert and Lachlan to run the remaining media assets and felt increasingly free to voice his disapproval of the editorial lines being run on Fox News and in the News Corp papers. Many believe the relationship between Lachlan and James broke down irrevocably from this point.
The real clue that relationships within the family had soured more broadly was the absence of Elisabeth, James and Prudence from their father's wedding to Elena Zhukova in June this year. It raised suspicions, now confirmed, that something was seriously amiss.
The fact Rupert Murdoch is said to have dubbed his efforts to lock in Lachlan's supremacy "Project Harmony" suggests he seriously misread the situation, underestimating the depth and unanimity of feeling among the siblings. Now Lachlan finds himself isolated while his three siblings are united as never before.
Rupert's long shadow
Perhaps the cruellest irony in all of this is that the act of succeeding Rupert Murdoch is impossible. He is one of the towering figures of the 20th and 21st centuries. Even those who deplore his influence have a grudging respect for the sheer scale of his achievements.
Lachlan Murdoch has spent his entire life in his father's shadow. Even now, despite having been anointed as the chosen one almost a year ago, it is rarely his name that is invoked when discussing the fortunes of the company.
The saga currently playing out in a Nevada courtroom suggests Rupert, at 93, is still fighting Lachlan's battles for him. And in doing so, is seeking to maintain his influence on the family empire from the grave. That's a very long shadow indeed.
As Lachlan Murdoch celebrates his birthday today, what will he make of it all? He has the job he was groomed for all his life, a successful 25-year marriage, three children, friends who attest to his integrity and loyalty, sprawling mansions in Sydney and Los Angeles and a $150 million superyacht.
But the businesses he runs face unprecedented structural challenges, his most profitable media asset has inflamed division at one of the most consequential moments in American history and his three siblings are publicly united against him.
Has it all been worth it?
Lachlan Murdoch and members of the Murdoch family did not accept our requests for an interview.
Australian Story's three-part series Making Lachlan Murdoch starts Monday at 8 on ABC TV and ABC iview.
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