
For two years, there had been no serious talks of a settlement by either side. The last time you came on the show, Jeremy, to preview this trial, a settlement wasn’t really even anything we dwelled on. So let’s talk about why this has all happened because it did feel very much unexpected. That’s what Fox will pay to Dominion Voting Systems, sparing Fox the, really, potentially embarrassing spectacle of having the chairman of its company, Rupert Murdoch, its star hosts like Tucker Carlson and Sean Hannity from taking the witness stand. This case had gone on for two years with no serious settlement talks, and now both parties have agreed to make this go away for $787.5 million. We had an 11th hour settlement in the case that no one really anticipated. That’s right, where I’m doing reporting trying to figure out how this all fell apart. And instead, based on your background on this Google Hangout, you are not in a courtroom. Jeremy, you were at this very moment supposed to be in a Delaware courtroom covering day two of this blockbuster defamation trial.

My colleague, Jeremy Peters, was inside the courtroom as it happened. Today, why at the very last minute both Dominion Voting Systems and Fox News decided to settle the most closely watched defamation lawsuit in decades rather than make their case at trial. michael barbaroįrom The New York Times, I’m Michael Barbaro. Please review the episode audio before quoting from this transcript and email with any questions. While it has been reviewed by human transcribers, it may contain errors. This transcript was created using speech recognition software.



Transcript The Blockbuster Fox Defamation Trial That Wasn’t The settlement with Dominion Voting Systems was a final twist in a case that exposed the inner workings of the most powerful voice in conservative news.
