和谐英语

您现在的位置是:首页 > 英语新闻 > 国际英语新闻

正文

国际英语新闻:UK Parliament Report: Murdoch ‘Not Fit’ to Head Media Company

2012-05-02来源:VOA
Scandal's fallout continues

In a statement Tuesday, the company said it is “carefully reviewing the select committee’s report and will respond shortly.” It acknowledged wrongdoing at the closed newspaper, and apologized “to everyone whose privacy was invaded.”

Rupert Murdoch and his son, James, have been forced to testify to inquiry panels in sessions broadcast live on television. The parliament committee said James Murdoch should have been more attentive to emails about phone-hacking at the family’s British media company, which he ran until he stepped down as the scandal built momentum in recent months.

Brock said this report, and others to come from ongoing inquiries, could push the senior Murdoch, one of the world’s most powerful and determined executives, to also step back from the leading role in his global media empire.

“One of the outcomes that people have always considered possible is that Murdoch, who is now aged 81, might have to step back from control of the company," said Brock. "I do not think he particularly wants to do that. But there has to come a moment sooner or later where he is going to step back. And it could be that the scandal is going to get so bad that it’s quite possible that he could step back, yes.”

Politics

There also is a political aspect to this scandal. The committee report was endorsed by members from the opposition Labor Party and by the Liberal Democrats, who are part of the governing coalition. But members from the senior coalition partner, the Conservative Party, did not endorse the report, saying the conclusion that Rupert Murdoch is “not a fit person” to run a media company was not justified.

One recent revelation of the investigations is that an aide to a government minister kept Murdoch informed about deliberations on his bid to buy a controlling interest in Sky Broadcasting. Brock said Murdoch has been close to British politicians of all parties, but now the scandal is reaching dangerously close to Prime Minister David Cameron.

“Various recent revelations have started to come uncomfortably close to the prime minister in his office in Downing Street, and it is beginning to look as if David Cameron is beginning to be really rather worried about the implications of this scandal for his government overall,” said Brock.

A judicial inquiry into the phone-hacking scandal is continuing, as are several police investigations. And more reports critical of Rupert and James Murdoch are expected.