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Lachlan Murdoch Secures Control With $3.3 Billion Deal Ending Family Battle After 25 Years

A decisive settlement ends decades of succession uncertainty in the Murdoch empire. Lachlan Murdoch Secures Control With $3.3 Billion Deal Ending Family Battle After 25 Years

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Lachlan Murdoch Secures Control of Rupert Murdoch Empire With $3.3 Billion Deal
Lachlan Murdoch stands with his father Rupert Murdoch, both in navy suits, after a $3.3 billion settlement secures the empire’s future.

When Lachlan Murdoch stepped up to the lectern this week, framed by a giant U.S. flag, it symbolized more than just a speech. It marked the moment he cemented his father’s 70-year legacy and positioned himself as the undisputed leader of one of the most influential media empires in modern history.

In a complex $3.3 billion settlement, reported by The New York Times and confirmed by both Fox Corporation and News Corp, Lachlan’s siblings — Prudence Murdoch, Elisabeth Murdoch, and James Murdoch — agreed to sell their stakes and step away permanently. This deal not only ends years of bitter infighting but also ensures that the Murdoch dynasty remains firmly under Lachlan’s conservative direction.


End of a Family Feud

The settlement price equates to about 80% of the siblings’ voting share value, a significant jump from the 60% Lachlan had previously offered. With this agreement, the siblings have walked away with more than $1 billion each, closing the chapter on a rivalry that once threatened to splinter the empire.

For years, Rupert Murdoch, now 94, faced the pressing question: what would happen to his empire after his death? The family dispute had reached U.S. probate court in Nevada, where Lachlan and Rupert attempted to amend the irrevocable family trust. That battle has now been extinguished, allowing Lachlan to step forward unchallenged.

Lachlan Murdoch Secures Control of Rupert Murdoch Empire With $3.3 Billion Deal

The Editorial Divide

The Murdoch empire has long been a lightning rod for political controversy. At the heart of the feud was a profound editorial clash. Lachlan, like his father, has steered outlets such as Fox News and The New York Post further toward conservative narratives.

In contrast, his younger brother James Murdoch, a Democratic Party donor, favored more progressive stances on climate change, race, and immigration. His sisters, Elisabeth and Prudence, leaned toward liberalism as well. This ideological split fueled years of tension, with James openly criticizing Fox’s coverage during the Trump era.

Now, with their exit, Lachlan is free to chart the editorial course without interference — a win for Rupert’s original vision of a right-leaning media powerhouse.


The Trust and the Power Shift

The Murdoch Family Trust, created in 1999 after Rupert’s divorce from Anna, had once posed the greatest challenge to Lachlan’s succession. With eight voting shares split among Rupert and his four eldest children, a stalemate seemed inevitable after Rupert’s death.

But this week’s agreement reshaped that future. Lachlan’s new private trust, which consolidates control until at least 2050, gives him sole authority to vote the family’s shares. Meanwhile, Rupert’s daughters with Wendi Deng — Grace and Chloe — retain a non-voting financial interest, keeping them passive stakeholders without influence.


What It Means for the Media Landscape

This move secures the Murdoch family’s ideological continuity. Outlets like Sky News Australia and The Australian will remain aligned with conservative politics, shaping debates across both the U.S. and Australia.

Lachlan Murdoch Secures Control of Rupert Murdoch Empire With $3.3 Billion Deal
NEW YORK, NY – NOVEMBER 01: Lachlan Murdoch, Executive Chairman of 21st Century Fox speaks at the New York Times DealBook conference on November 1, 2018 in New York City. (Photo by Stephanie Keith/Getty Images)

The deal also sends a powerful message to investors: the empire may be family-owned, but it will no longer be family-divided. Shares underwritten by Morgan Stanley are set to be offered publicly, reducing family holdings in Fox to 36% and News Corp to 31% while preserving Lachlan’s controlling grip.


Looking Ahead

For Lachlan, now in his early 50s, the settlement brings closure to a saga that has stretched across nearly three decades. Rupert once described him as “first among equals,” and today, that prophecy has been fulfilled.

But the long-term question remains: will Lachlan’s children — Kalan, Aidan, and Aerin — one day take the helm? The trust arrangement lasts until 2050, by which time Lachlan will be nearing 80. Whether history repeats itself with another family succession battle remains to be seen.

For now, however, the Murdoch empire has a clear leader. The family drama has been silenced, the legacy secured, and the conservative direction locked in.

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