WASHINGTON â The $787.5 million settlement between Fox News and Dominion Voting Systems spared executives and on-air talent from taking the stand in a defamation lawsuit that centered on Fox airing false claims of a stolen election in the weeks after former President Donald Trump's 2020 loss.
The lawsuit still revealed plenty of what Fox personalities had been saying about the bogus election claims, including Tucker Carlson, the network's top-rated host who was let go Monday. His unexplained departure has turned a spotlight on what he said in depositions, emails and text messages among the thousands of pages Dominion released in the leadup to jury selection in the case.
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Carlson's messages lambasted the news division and management, revealed how he felt about Donald Trump and demonstrated his skepticism of the election lies â so much so that Fox attorneys and company founder Rupert Murdoch held him up as part of their defense of the company. The judge who oversaw the case ruled that it was â CRYSTAL clear â none of the election claims related to Dominion was true.
THOSE SPREADING ELECTION LIES
âSidney Powell is lying,â Carlson told a Fox News producer in a Nov. 16, 2020, exchange before using expletives to describe Powell, an attorney representing Trump.
âYou keep telling our viewers that millions of votes were changed by the software. I hope you will prove that very soon,â Carlson wrote to Powell a day later. âYouâve convinced them that Trump will win. If you donât have conclusive evidence of fraud at that scale, itâs a cruel and reckless thing to keep saying.â There was no indication that Powell replied.
Fox attorneys noted that Carlson repeatedly questioned Powellâs claims in his broadcasts: âWhen we kept pressing, she got angry and told us to stop contacting her,â Carlson told viewers on Nov. 19, 2020.
Carlson told his audience that he had taken Powell seriously, but that she had never provided any evidence or demonstrated that the software Dominion used siphoned votes from Trump to Biden.
Carlson continued to trash Powell and Trump's legal team in a Nov. 23, 2020, text exchange with fellow Fox host Laura Ingraham and also bemoaned what he considered the presidentâs passivity in the face of the two Georgia runoffs.
After saying it was âpretty disgustingâ that more attorneys hadnât pushed back on the claims of Trumpâs attorneys who were trying to overturn the election results, Carlson wrote: âAnd now Trump, I learned this morning, is sitting back and letting them lose the senate. He doesnât care. I care. Iâve got four kids and plan to live here.â
FOX'S 2020 ELECTION COVERAGE
Fox viewers were outraged when the network called Arizona for Joe Biden on election night, a race call that was accurate. Fox executives and hosts began to worry about ratings as many of those viewers fled to other conservative outlets.
âWe worked really hard to build what we have. Those (expletive) are destroying our credibility. It enrages me,â Carlson said in a Nov. 6, 2020, exchange with an unidentified person.
On Nov. 8, after Biden was declared the winner, Carlson texted a couple of other employees: âDo the executives understand how much trust and credibility weâve lost with our audience? Weâre playing with fire, for real.â
Later in the chain, as others bring up Newsmax as an emerging competitor, Carlson said, âWith Trump behind it, an alternative like Newsmax could be devastating to us.â
In text messages to a producer on Nov 13, 2020, Carlson braced for a Trump press conference: âHeâs only good at destroying,â Carlson said of the then-president.
He later added, in regard to the fraud allegations being made by Trump and his allies, âHeâs playing with fire.â
TRUMP
In a text exchange with an unknown person on Jan. 4, 2021, Carlson expressed anger toward Trump. He said that âwe are very, very close to being able to ignore Trump most nightsâ and that âI truly canât wait.â
Carlson said he had no doubt there was fraud in the 2020 election, but said Trump and his lawyers had so discredited their case â and media figures like himself â âthat itâs infuriating. Absolutely enrages me.â
Addressing Trumpâs four years as president, Carlson said: âWeâre all pretending weâve got a lot to show for it, because admitting what a disaster itâs been is too tough to digest. But come on. There really isnât an upside to Trump.â
In texts early on the morning of Jan. 7, 2021, a day after the violent assault on the U.S. Capitol, Carlson and his longtime producer, Alex Pfeiffer, bemoaned how the rioters had believed Trumpâs election lies.
âThey take the president literally,â Pfeiffer said. âHe is to blame for everything that happened today.â
âThe problem is a little deeper than that Iâd say,â Carlson replied.
âObviously the problems are deep but at the core of it is Trump saying it was stolen,â Pfeiffer wrote.
âNot the core,â Carlson wrote. âAwful but a symptom.â
Later, Carlson writes of Trump: âHeâs a demonic force, a destroyer. But heâs not going to destroy us. Iâve been thinking about this every day for four years."
FOX NEWS DEPARTMENT
Some of the most heated vitriol was reserved for colleagues in the news division and included conversations with fellow on-air personalities Laura Ingraham and Sean Hannity.
On Nov. 13, the week after the 2020 election, Ingraham, Carlson and Hannity got into a text message exchange in which they lambasted the news division. It began with Ingraham pointing out a tweet by correspondent Bryan Llenas, saying he had seen no evidence of widespread voter fraud in Pennsylvania.
Carlson replied that Llenas had contacted him to apologize, then added âwhen has he ever 'reportedâ on anything.â
Ingraham then names another colleague who indicated there was no fraud, with Hannity responding: âGuys Iâve been telling them for 4 years. News depart that breaks no news ever.â In a subsequent Twitter message seconds later, Hannity says, âThey hate hate hate all three of us.â
Ingraham responds she doesnât âwant to be liked by themâ and Carlson chimes in, âTheyâre pathetic.â The conversation continues with Hannity bemoaning the damage that has been done to the brand: âIn one week and one debate they destroyed a brand that took 25 years to build and the damage is incalculable.â
Another text conversation by the trio three days later had Ingraham telling her colleagues that her anger at the news channel was âpronounced,â followed by an âlol.â In response, Carlson attacked two Fox anchors: âIt should be. We devote our lives to building an audience and they let Chris Wallace and Leland (expletive) Vittert wreck it. Too much.â Wallace and Vittert have since left the network.
The three hosts then started musing about a path forward after Ingraham says they have âenormous power,â and that they should think about how, together, they can force a change. Carlsonâs response: âFor sure. The first thing we need to do exactly what we want to do. Thatâs the key. Leland Vittert seems to have the authority to do whatever he wants. We should too.â
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Associated Press writers Christina A. Cassidy in Atlanta, Randall Chase in Dover, Del., and Gary Fields in Washington contributed to this report.
