| 
						 
						Fox News chief Ailes 
						resigns after sexual harassment claims 
						
		 
		Send a link to a friend  
 
		
		
		 [July 22, 2016] 
		By Jessica Toonkel and Lisa Richwine 
           
			NEW YORK/LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Roger 
			Ailes on Thursday resigned as chairman and chief executive of Fox 
			News Channel following allegations of sexual harassment, an abrupt 
			end to his 20-year rein over America's most lucrative and powerful 
			cable news channel for conservatives. 
			 
			Rupert Murdoch, 85, the executive chairman of Twenty-First Century 
			Fox Inc, the parent of Fox News, will assume the role of CEO Fox 
			News and Fox Business Network on an interim basis, the company said 
			on Thursday. 
			 
			Ailes, who will serve as an informal adviser to Rupert Murdoch and 
			no longer have an official role at the company, will receive a 
			severance package of about $40 million, according to a source 
			familiar with the situation, who asked to remain anonymous. 
			 
			In his resignation letter to Murdoch, Ailes did not indicate he had 
			done anything wrong. 
			 
			"I take particular pride in the role that I have played advancing 
			the careers of the many women I have promoted to executive and 
			on-air positions," Ailes wrote in the letter, which his lawyer Susan 
			Estrich provided to Reuters. 
			 
			However, he added: "I will not allow my presence to become a 
			distraction from the work that must be done every day to ensure that 
			Fox News and Fox Business continue to lead our industry." 
			 
			The resignation marks a swift downfall for Ailes, the 76-year-old 
			media executive who advised several U.S. Republican presidents, 
			including George H.W. Bush, and turned Fox News into the 
			most-watched U.S. cable news channel. 
			
			  
			His departure comes on the final and biggest night of the Republican 
			National Convention, where Donald Trump will formally accept the 
			Republican presidential nomination. 
			 
			Trump tweeted on Thursday, “Roger Ailes just called. He is a great 
			guy & assures me that 'Trump' will be treated fairly on @FoxNews. 
			His word is always good!” 
			 
			Former Fox News anchor Gretchen Carlson sued Ailes earlier this 
			month, claiming sexual harassment. Ailes has denied the charges. Fox 
			hired a law firm to conduct an internal investigation. 
			 
			New York magazine followed up with reports of other women who said 
			they had been harassed by Ailes. On Tuesday, the magazine said that 
			popular Fox News anchor Megyn Kelly had told investigators hired by 
			Fox that Ailes "made unwanted sexual advances toward her" about 10 
			years ago. 
			 
			Ailes, who founded the cable channel in 1996, did not sexually 
			harass Kelly, according to a statement attributed to his lawyer in 
			the New York Times on Tuesday. 
			 
			The resignation comes as Fox News, known for a lineup of politically 
			conservative commentators including best-selling author Bill 
			O'Reilly, is drawing record viewership. The network is the 
			most-watched channel in all of basic cable television this year with 
			an average of 2.2 million prime-time viewers, according to Nielsen 
			data through June. 
			 
			CHALLENGES AHEAD 
			 
			Whoever replaces Ailes faces the twin challenges of retaining Fox 
			News' established on-air stars such as O'Reilly and Kelly, while 
			making the network attractive to younger viewers, a demographic it 
			has consistently missed. 
			 
			O'Reilly and Kelly's contracts are up in 2017, and stars including 
			Greta Van Susteren and Sean Hannity all have clauses in their 
			contracts that allow them to leave the network if Ailes departs, 
			according to media reports. 
			 
			New management will also have to win over the many Ailes loyalists 
			left in the ranks. 
			
            [to top of second column]  | 
            
             
            
			
			  
            
			Roger Ailes, chairman and CEO of Fox News and Fox Television 
			Stations, answers questions during a panel discussion at the 
			Television Critics Association summer press tour in Pasadena, 
			California July 24, 2006. Picture taken July 24, 2006. REUTERS/Fred 
			Prouser/File Photo 
            
			  
"Roger Ailes is the best boss I have ever had. I admire him professionally," Fox 
News anchor Chris Wallace said in an email. "And I love him personally. I am 
heartbroken he is gone." 
 
Murdoch, who built his father's Australian newspaper business into one of the 
world's most powerful news and entertainment conglomerates, has always been 
fiercely loyal to Ailes and cut his vacation short in the French Riviera with 
his wife Jerry Hall to handle the resignation. 
The media mogul may be better positioned than anyone to keep morale up and 
persuade talent to stay, said Brian Wieser, an analyst at Pivotal Research 
Group: “Fox News was as much his baby as it was Ailes’ baby. I think it’s a 
great short-term solution." 
 
Nevertheless, Fox would be wise to work quickly to find a new CEO, said Merrill 
Brown, a former media executive who helped launch MSNBC. “It is a good choice if 
its length is measured in weeks." 
 
Ailes' long experience as both a television producer and a Republican strategist 
helped him to formulate a winning strategy: hire charismatic talent to appeal to 
a conservative audience. 
 
“Roger Ailes has made a remarkable contribution to our company and our country," 
Murdoch said in a statement. "Roger shared my vision of a great and independent 
television organization and executed it brilliantly over 20 great years." 
Critics said Ailes pushed a Republican agenda under the oft-repeated slogan 
"Fair and Balanced." His fans said he smartly recognized that conservative TV 
viewers were not seeing their viewpoints reflected on Time Warner Inc's CNN or 
major broadcast networks. 
 
Fox News Channel went on the air in 1996, just before Bill Clinton was elected 
to a second term as president, with Ailes as founding CEO. 
 
While Ailes' departure may not come at an ideal time for Fox News, the momentum 
of record ratings amid the most sensational U.S. presidential election in 
decades may give the cable network some breathing room to recover, media buyers 
and Wall Street analysts have told Reuters. 
  
And some of them say this could be an opportunity for Fox News, whose median age 
of viewers is over 65, to focus on getting younger fans. 
 
(Reporting by Jessica Toonkel and Lisa Richwine; Writing by Anna Driver; Editing 
by Bill Rigby) 
				 
			[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights 
				reserved.] Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, 
			broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.  |