Mining billionaire Gina Rinehart is
bankrolling the acquisition of a 9.5% stake in Southern Cross Media by Bruce McWilliam, who worked for Murdoch’s News Corp for nine years and is also a former Seven Network executive.
This venture is costing Rinehart $26 million. It does not buy her a direct stake in Southern Cross, but if McWilliam cannot uphold his side of a security deed he has signed with her, she could take control of it .
Southern Cross is one of Australia’s biggest media organisations. It owns the Seven Network, 7news.com.au, the Triple M and Hit radio brands, a raft of regional radio stations, and West Australian Newspapers.
The Rinehart-McWilliam-Murdoch axis is a formidable force, part of a new combination of media, political and mining interests, reminiscent of that which formed the Liberal Party in the 1940s. The other key figures are News Corp chair Lachlan Murdoch, One Nation leader Pauline Hanson and Liberal Party director Tony Abbott.
This is the lens through which it is instructive to assess the media’s coverage of One Nation’s rise since the Farrer byelection on May 9.
To see the parallels with the 1940s, we need to join a few dots.
Rinehart is a benefactor to Hanson. She recently bought her a light aircraft worth $1 million.
She is also a benefactor to Lachlan Murdoch. Her company Hancock Prospecting is sponsoring Sky News, owned by Murdoch’s News Corporation, to the extent of a little over $1 million for a Sky event in Dubbo called the Bush Summit.
Lachlan Murdoch is chairman of News Corporation. In 2023, he appointed Tony Abbott to the board of the News subsidiary, Fox Corporation, a day after Rupert Murdoch announced his retirement. In May this year, Abbott was elected unopposed as federal president of the Liberal Party.
Lessons from the 1940s
The parallels with the 1940s can be seen in volume two of Sally Young’s magisterial two-volume history of the Australia media, Media Monsters , where she describes the machinations that led to the formation of the Liberal Party.
The right was in disarray. Robert Menzies’ comically ill-named United Australia Party had been trounced by Labor at the 1943 election. In the aftermath, Menzies was re-elected leader but made it a condition that he had the right to form a new party.
He was backed by an entity called Collins House. This was a collection of companies connected by networks of powerful business figures who dominated mining and manufacturing. An influential figure was Lachlan Murdoch’s grandfather, Keith Murdoch. As managing director of the all-powerful Herald and Weekly Times (HWT) newspaper group, he provided a vital connection between the Collins House group and the most senior level of politics.
The HWT and other major media proprietors of the day anointed Menzies and his proposal for the new Liberal Party, at a dinner of Collins House magnates in Melbourne in 1944.
The difference between the political circumstances of the 1940s and those of today is that today there are two right-wing political parties contending for supremacy: the Liberal Party and One Nation.
Rinehart seems to be having a million quid each way on which will prevail. By contrast, if the recent coverage of One Nation by The Australian is any guide, Lachlan Murdoch has already cast his vote decisively for the Liberal Party.
Mining billionaire Gina Rinehart has a significant stake in politics and the media.
Russell Freeman/AAP
The media sober up
For a fortnight after One Nation’s historic win in Farrer, the media, including News Corp media, were intoxicated by the attendant excitement and controversy: the shredding of Liberal Party support; Hanson’s ambition to be prime minister; the possibility of a Liberal-One Nation coalition.
Then, led by The Australian, the media began to sober up. On May 23, its editor-at-large, Paul Kelly, wrote that the Nationals, Liberals and One Nation were locked in a bitter competition with “life or death” consequences.
From that point on, The Australian applied the blowtorch of journalistic scrutiny to One Nation, and The Age and Sydney Morning Herald swiftly followed.
With its customary disregard for journalistic ethics, The Australian made a point of reporting that One Nation’s South Australian parliamentary team was looking like a “rainbow coalition”, one of its MPs having come out as gay with a partner who was an Indonesian Muslim.
But then it got into some serious public-interest journalism. For two days it pursued the party over its handling of rape allegations against an adviser, Sean Black.
It accused Hanson of shirking her parliamentary duties by being absent from 88% of Senate estimates hearings over the past decade. It also drew attention to the fact One Nation had failed to lodge audited financial records for three years in Queensland, and disparaged its policy proposal for citizen-initiated referendums.
After initial excitement at One Nation’s recent surge, The Australian has turned the blowtorch on Paulin…
Read the full article at The Conversation (AU) →📄Source document: Maxine Newlands
4 reports
ABC News (Australia)State / PublicRight2 days ago 'She knows what she's talking about': Voters weigh in on Pauline HansonABC News reports on growing support for Pauline Hanson and her One Nation party in north Queensland, citing increased polling numbers and public endorsements. The article mentions political analyst Maxine Newlands noting One Nation's rise, attributed to voter dissatisfaction with major parties. It also covers Hanson's recent reunion with mining billionaire Gina Rinehart and includes quotes from supporters who view her as being on the 'right track.'
Bias read (Right): The article presents Pauline Hanson and her One Nation party in a favorable light, highlighting rising support, positive endorsements from voters, and framing her actions as addressing public concerns. While it does mention criticism (e.g., 'over the top with some things'), the overall tone and phrā
Official sources cited
- press release Maxine Newlands
- press release Lauren Mylonas
ABC News (Australia)State / PublicCenter3 days ago A big orange bulldozer is ploughing its way through the political arenaIn a recent event in Townsville, billionaire Gina Rinehart encouraged Pauline Hanson to adopt the 'orange bulldozer' metaphor during a political forum. Rinehart presented Hanson with a toy-sized bulldozer and urged the audience to simulate its sound. This follows Rinehart's prior support for Hanson, including providing access to a private plane and financial contributions. The reference contrasts with former Prime Minister Scott Morrison's earlier use of similar rhetoric, which reportedly alienated voters.
Bias read (Center): The article presents events objectively without overtly favoring any political side. It describes actions and statements made by individuals without evaluative language or biased framing. The tone remains neutral, focusing on factual descriptions of the event and context provided by past political r
The Sydney Morning HeraldParty-alignedRight7 days ago Pauline Hanson new preferred Prime MinisterExclusive new polling indicates that Pauline Hanson, leader of the One Nation party, has become the preferred choice for Prime Minister in Australia.
Bias read (Right): The headline and summary present Pauline Hanson's rise as a significant development without explicit criticism or praise, but the framing of her as the 'preferred' Prime Minister implies a positive spin on her political ascent, which aligns with right-leaning narratives. The lack of contextual nuanc
The Conversation (AU)IndependentLeft11 days ago A right mess: how mining, media and politics interests are combining to influence public debate in AustraliaThe article discusses the financial ties between mining billionaire Gina Rinehart, media mogul Bruce McWilliam, and News Corp chairman Lachlan Murdoch. It highlights Rinehart's investment in Southern Cross Media through McWilliam, who previously worked for News Corp. The piece draws parallels between this alliance and historical political-media combinations in Australia, referencing figures like Pauline Hanson and Tony Abbott.
Bias read (Left): The article frames the convergence of mining, media, and political interests as a 'right mess,' implying negative consequences for public debate. It emphasizes the potential influence of wealthy individuals over media ownership and highlights connections between conservative figures like Pauline Han