Bristol (UK): Global media tycoon Rupert Murdoch has announced his retirement as chairman of Fox and News Corp, making way for his son Lachlan. He has been demonised as a puppet master who would pull the strings of politicians behind the scenes, as a man with too much power. But what influence did he and his fellow media moguls really wield?
The day after the 1992 UK general election, Murdoch's tabloid The Sun claimed credit for the Tory victory with the notorious headline It Was The Sun What Won it. Murdoch subsequently denied he had such influence.
But in 1995, and with another general election on the horizon, Labour leader Tony Blair certainly thought it was worth courting the media mogul. Blair, along with his chief press secretary Alistair Campbell, travelled to Hayman Island, Australia, to address a News Corp. conference.
Two years later The Sun turned its back on the Conservatives and backed New Labour, which emerged victorious from that year's general election. Commentators have argued that Murdoch's US media empire, notably Fox News, gave Donald Trump significant public support in his quest for presidential power.
Although Murdoch now seems to have gone cold on Trump, his latest biography quotes the tycoon's ex-wife Jerry Hall as telling him: You helped make him president.
More than a century ago, commentators were worrying about the power of the press barons. The archetype of this malign figure was Lord Northcliffe, who as Winston Churchill put it, felt himself to be possessed of formidable power after helping to unseat a prime minister and install the next one.
According to Churchill, armed with the solemn prestige of The Times in one hand and the ubiquity of the Daily Mail in the other, during the first world war Northcliffe aspired to exercise a commanding influence on events. Of course, the media landscape has changed dramatically since then. Indeed, it has even been transformed in the years since The Sun's political interventions of the 1990s.
Today's press barons have had to come to terms with a digital revolution which has uprooted the traditional business model of newspapers: readership has declined and advertising revenues have collapsed, hoovered up by tech giants such as Google and Meta. Local newspapers have borne the brunt of the financial damage caused by this and by collapsing print sales, but national newspapers have struggled too.
One good example is the Telegraph Media Group: bought by the Barclay Brothers for 665 million pound in 2004, but valued at just 200 million pound by 2019. The group is now up for sale again. Meanwhile alt truthers, like Russell Brand, amass huge followings on social media while railing against a media elite that seems to include most of the traditional newspaper press.
As the 2024 election looms, it is timely to consider how the power and influence of newspapers and newspaper owners has waxed and waned, and to ask what this history might tell us about the state of the press and public life in the UK today.
A free press' is born
By the middle of the 19th century, the British newspaper industry was one of the most diverse and sophisticated in the world. Campaigners had, over the previous decades, successfully lobbied to see the dismantling of government restrictions and taxes on the press.
Britain now had a free press, with no prior censorship of what could be printed and an essentially free market with little state regulation. Campaigners hoped this would usher in a period of democratic political expression in print. The free market would supposedly give everyone a voice, allowing a multiplicity of viewpoints to be published each day.
For a fleeting moment, this seemed to be borne out in an immediate flourishing of new titles. In the six years after the 1855 repeal of the newspaper stamp duty, 492 new newspapers were established, many of them in provincial towns and cities which had never previously had their own newspapers.
The reforming Manchester Liberal MP John Bright applauded the great revolution of opinion on many public questions that was taking place thanks to the freedom of the newspaper press.
However, many of the new titles quickly went to the wall and during the later 19th century a very different type of newspaper industry emerged. A new generation of entrepreneurs realised that they could benefit financially from market opportunities by applying novel technologies and techniques to newspaper production and distribution.
Recently constructed national and international telegraph networks allowed them to bring in the latest news from around the country, and around the world, scooping their rivals.
Steam engines could be used to power printing presses, allowing them to print vast numbers of newspapers quickly enough to sell them the same day. And steam trains provided a way to get those newspapers to readers across the country using the new rail network. Fleet Street became the centre of a truly national industry.
Edward Levy (later Levy-Lawson) led the way. From 1855 he owned The Daily Telegraph: the name of the paper was itself a reference to the new technologies being deployed in the newspaper industry. Levy-Lawson's Telegraph combined serious, up-to-date news reporting with American-style journalistic innovations, including lurid crime reporting, plenty of sports coverage and publicity stunts, such as backing H. M. Stanley's 1874 expedition across Africa on the Congo River.
The purpose of all this was to sell more newspapers. By 1877, the Telegraph's circulation approached 250,000 the highest daily sales figure for any newspaper anywhere in the world.
Levy-Lawson saw newspapers primarily as a business, not as a route to political influence or social advancement. Although he was made Lord Burnham in 1903, the established elite looked down on his commercial origins. That snobbery was reinforced by antisemitic prejudice. The most disgusting public attacks on Levy-Lawson came from Henry Labouchere, editor of a newspaper called Truth, who raved against the influence of Hebrew barons on British public life.
Levy-Lawson established a template for a new type of press proprietor who was, first and foremost, a businessman. These entrepreneurs formed public companies to raise the vast sums of capital required to build their newspaper empires. They priced their newspapers aggressively low to attract the largest possible readership.
As a result, sales revenue fell well below enormous running costs. They made up the shortfall by raking in money from advertisers attracted by the large circulations and national reach of their papers. The battle was now for scale. Each press baron wanted to control the biggest possible newspaper empire.
The Napoleon of Fleet Street
By the late 19th century, a fortune could be made from owning newspapers. Alfred Harmsworth came from a modest background but built up a stable of publications aimed at entertaining, amusing and interesting the enormous new literate public created by Victorian universal primary education and rapid urbanisation.
Harmsworth used a range of eye-catching schemes to publicise his papers, including a competition that awarded the winner a pound a week for the rest of their life. By 1894, his newspapers and periodicals had a combined circulation of almost two million, constituting the world's largest publishing business.
In 1896 Harmsworth launched the Daily Mail, a daily paper selling for a halfpenny. It targeted an aspirational lower-middle-class national readership, made up of women as well as men an attractive demographic for advertisers. The paper was to contain everything that could be expected from a serious daily, presented in a respectable-looking package, but with more life, human interest and entertainment.
Content was condensed into short articles, presented in a punchy, accessible style, aimed at the new breed of office workers and commuters. Harmsworth's brother Harold (later Lord Rothermere) ran the commercial side of the business on efficient, industrial lines.
In 1905, Harmsworth was made Lord Northcliffe. He chose this title in part because it allowed him, half-jokingly, to initial his correspondence N, in the style of Napoleon. He became infamous for his dictatorial, erratic, pedantic, obsessive and abusive management style. He would sometimes appoint two people to the same post and make them compete with one another to keep their job.
Employees faced lavish rewards, alternating with frequent threats of dismissal. Fleet Street journalists warned prospective job applicants that Northcliffe would suck out your brains, then sack you. Northcliffe cultivated informers in the Daily Mail office to tell him what was going on behind the scenes and to monitor private telephone conversations. He liked his staff to be his creatures.
A later newspaper editor thought that there was something more than a little nauseating about his relations with many of his chief associates; one wonders how they could stomach the humiliations he imposed and retain their self-respect. The political elite, and many journalists, looked down on Northcliffe and his popular papers. Lord Salisbury famously dismissed the Mail as being produced by officeboys for officeboys.
Northcliffe's former employee, E.T. Raymond, thought that the press baron had an uncanny way of arriving at the results of thought without thought itself. Another contemporary described Northcliffe as brainless, formless, familiar and impudent.
Northcliffe's purchase of The Times in 1908 marked an attempt to expand his political influence, but some contemporaries still doubted whether he was very important.
Lord Esher remarked that he evidently loves power, but his education is defective, and he has no idea to what uses power can be put. Many of Northcliffe's press crusades seemed harmlessly apolitical, such as his campaigns to promote the consumption of wholemeal bread or to grow better sweet-peas.
However, others worried about the consequences of allowing a small number of very rich men, running enormous corporate conglomerates, to dominate the British newspaper industry.
The writer and journalist R. A. Scott-James lamented in 1913 that privilege now dominated public debate, and that the press had become a vehicle for false notions and antisocial ideas. The writer Norman Angell (a former Northcliffe employee who subsequently became a Nobel-prize-winning peace activist) similarly argued that the modern industrialised Press had become the most powerful instrument for the capture of the mind by our industrial aristocracy.
Newspapers, Angell claimed, now worked to exploit human weaknesses for the purpose of profit, corrupting public debate.
Press, politics and the first world war
Concern about the power of press barons grew exponentially during WWI. From 1914, Northcliffe used his newspapers constantly to critique the Liberal government's coordination of the war effort. His main targets were Prime Minister Herbert Asquith and the secretary of state for war, Lord Kitchener.
In 1915, Northcliffe accused Kitchener, in print, of failing to supply the army with enough high explosive artillery shells. Initially, this made the Mail unpopular. Circulation dropped dramatically and the paper was ceremonially burned on the floor of the London Stock Exchange.
However, as its claims about government mismanagement began to seem justified, the Mail's popularity recovered. The shell scandal contributed to the fall of the Liberal government and the establishment of a reconstituted coalition under Asquith's leadership.
The ambitious Liberal politician David Lloyd George worked closely with Northcliffe in order to further his own career and Lloyd George was rewarded when he was made Minister of Munitions in the wake of the shell scandal. But Northcliffe's criticism of the government continued and Cabinet members worried that German propagandists were exploiting his public attacks on the British war efforts to undermine morale.
Northcliffe's campaigning finally helped precipitate the resignation of Asquith in December 1916. The Daily News (a national newspaper founded in 1846 by none other than Charles Dickens) branded Northcliffe a press dictator for his role in the prime minister's downfall.
Northcliffe's ally Lloyd George took Asquith's place as prime minister. However, Lloyd George now cannily kept the press baron at arm's length, giving him relatively minor official jobs that came with little power while making it difficult for him to attack a government with which he was now identified.
At the end of the war, Lloyd George finally broke openly with Northcliffe, attacking the press baron in a vitriolic speech delivered in the House of Commons. Northcliffe was deluded, Lloyd George suggested, in thinking that as part of his great task of saving the world he had the right to dictate the terms of the 1919 peace settlement with Germany.
Lloyd George spoke of Northcliffe's diseased vanity and tapped his own forehead meaningfully as he delivered the speech to the assembled MPs. By this point Northcliffe had become a serious liability to Lloyd George, and was indeed ill, both physically and mentally. His behaviour had become more erratic and aggressive than ever, and his language increasingly foul and paranoid. At one point he was reported to have brandished a revolver at his doctor.
Northcliffe died in 1922 leaving no legitimate heirs, although he had had several mistresses and two secret families. Management of his media empire passed to his brother, Lord Rothermere, who sold The Times and went on to expand in more profitable directions, conducting vicious commercial warfare against his rivals.