Murdoch makes Brexit appeal for Sky deal approval

epa04841312 James Murdoch, CEO of 21st Century Fox arrives for the Allen and Company 33rd Annual Media and Technology Conference, in Sun Valley, Idaho, USA, 10 July 2015. The event brings together the leaders of the world's of media, technology, sports, industry and politics.  EPA/ANDREW GOMBERT

Bloomberg

James Murdoch played to concerns about the post-Brexit UK economy in advocating for the approval of 21st Century Fox Inc.’s bid for pay-TV company Sky Plc, as the government committed the deal to months of additional scrutiny.
The Fox CEO and son of billionaire Rupert Murdoch, speaking to an audience of broadcast industry top brass, responded to a decision hours earlier by the government to refer the $15.5 billion purchase to a wider probe by the country’s competition authority.
“If the UK is truly open for business post-Brexit, we look forward to moving through the regulatory review process,” Murdoch said onstage at a Royal Television Society conference in Cambridge, England, “and this transformative transaction for the UK creative sector becoming an affirmation of that claim.”
The extra review adds more delay and costs to New York-based Fox’s purchase of the 61 percent of Sky it doesn’t already own, Rupert Murdoch’s second attempt at the broadcaster he founded after a phone-hacking scandal at his newspapers derailed a 2010 bid.
While James Murdoch, 44, wouldn’t comment on any concessions Fox would make to gain approval, he said he was confident the deal would go through. The company expects the deal to be completed by mid-2018, barring delays.
The keynote address gave the executive the chance to distance the tribulations at Fox News in the US from Sky News in the UK, which he praised for its broadcasting standards. He defended the handling of sexual-harassment claims at Fox News, centred around Roger Ailes—the now-deceased former co-founder, CEO and chairman who built the company with Rupert Murdoch—saying that firing Ailes was “not a
hard decision.”
James Murdoch’s comments highlight generational change at his father’s media empire, even as the elder Murdoch, 86, maintains a grip on power as co-chairman of 21st Century Fox and Fox News chairman. Opponents of the deal have thrown a spotlight on harassment allegations at Fox News as well as the past handling of the phone-hacking scandal at News Corp., which is now separate from the US film-and-television operation.
While the investigation opens the deal to more uncertainty, some analysts see it as a necessary step toward probable approval.

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