At 11:20 p.m. on November 3, the Fox News Decision Desk called the state of Arizona for Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden. This, according to a New York Times report, sent President Donald Trump into a rage ahead of a 2:30 a.m. speech in the White House East Room, where he falsely claimed victory.
That Saturday, November 7, Fox News joined other mainstream national decision desks in calling the race for Biden. In doing so, the pro-Trump media organization inadvertently kicked off an ideological race to the bottom among right-wing media. To Trump and his supporters, Fox’s call was a betrayal; to others in conservative media, it was a call to arms. With Trump virtually immune to criticism -- if the past few years have proved anything, it’s that the president is seen as a sort of demigod among the far right -- the sharpest attacks in the wake of his electoral defeat were aimed at Fox News.
“If Trump loses and it’s a close election, blame Chris Wallace and Fox News,” said Newsmax CEO Chris Ruddy during a November 3 appearance on The Michael Berry Show.
“There’s a lot of people mad -- Fox News viewers -- and those people are sampling other places,” said former Fox News host Bill O’Reilly during a November 17 edition of his No Spin News show. “We have been a tremendous beneficiary of that. We have tens of thousands of people signing up for memberships on BillOReilly.com in the last few weeks.”
The Daily Wire called on its newsletter subscribers to “cut the cord” on cable news, in part because Fox “downplayed any questions about voting irregularities reported from the most important swing states.”
One America News Network host and unofficial Trump legal adviser Christina Bobb went so far as to call Fox a “Democrat Party hack” that “was trying to breathe life into the Biden campaign” by calling Arizona. On Twitter, OAN host Kara McKinney told a viewer, “Don’t worry about me caving like FOX. My morals are more important to me than any paycheck or ratings.”
Newsmax host Grant Stinchfield tweeted that Fox News was “sinking” and welcomed its viewers to watch his network, instead. Serial plagiarist and Newsmax host Benny Johnson tweeted that “Fox News is now indistinguishable from CNN” and called on conservatives to stop watching.
A right-wing media civil war had broken out in the election’s aftermath -- the type of conflict that would prompt dozens of “Democrats in disarray!” headlines if the infighting were happening on the left. But as with so much of what passes for news among conservative media outlets, the claims that Fox now stands against Trump are far from accurate.
Fox News is as much of a right-wing disinformation vector as ever.
Between October 14 and November 1, Fox News spent 36 hours and 34 minutes spread across 596 segments covering dubious stories about Biden’s son Hunter. The entire Hunter Biden saga, itself a hard-to-follow conspiracy theory, was pushed by Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani with the goal of torpedoing the elder Biden’s presidential campaign. Key aspects of the story were debunked or otherwise unsubstantiated.
But questionable or not, Fox couldn’t get enough of the nonscandal, spreading its coverage across both opinion (21 hours, 56 minutes) and “straight news” (14 hours, 38 minutes) shows. And this was only one example in a series of right-wing smears Fox News promoted in the run-up to Election Day.
From the failure of the “unmasking” scandal to repeated efforts to downplay the damage being wrought by COVID-19, Fox consistently sided with Trump and tried to boost his reelection chances throughout the 2020 campaign. During one nine-day stretch in October, Fox aired more than nine hours of live coverage of Trump rallies. The network also helped Trump spread baseless allegations of widespread voter fraud before the election even happened, celebrated a group of Trump supporters who tried to run a Biden bus off the road, and made a last-ditch attempt to concoct a “deplorable moment” scandal for Biden.
Fox News does not have a “leftist agenda” nor is it in any way a liberal news outlet, and the network certainly did not turn against Trump following Election Day. In fact, a recent Media Matters study of the first nine days after Fox called the race for Biden found that the channel cast doubt on the election results 574 times, with 208 of those instances happening during Fox’s “straight news” shows. Fox host Sean Hannity called for a “do-over” election in Pennsylvania after it became apparent that Trump was headed for defeat (he has since gone after Republican officials who allowed election results to stand in states Trump lost). Prime-time host Laura Ingraham promoted the idea that perhaps the Supreme Court could simply overturn the election in Trump’s favor. And Tucker Carlson falsely claimed that votes were being cast on behalf of dead people and made the ridiculous argument that “no honest person” would say the election was fair.
Since its inception, Fox News has been a cesspool of lies and right-wing propaganda. This remains true today, even as the network’s success in radicalizing conservatives has left it open to attacks from its own pro-Trump audience.
Right-wing arguments that Fox isn’t conservative enough have been a hallmark of the Trump era.
Trump has always had something of a love-hate relationship with Fox.
“[Fox News] has been treating me very unfairly & I have therefore decided that I won’t be doing any more Fox shows for the foreseeable future,” then-candidate Trump tweeted in September 2015. Days earlier, he criticized the channel for hosting “Trump haters.”
This marked Trump’s second clash with Fox, following the August 2015 brouhaha with then-Fox anchor Megyn Kelly over a debate question about some of his past sexist remarks.
In January 2016, Trump called for Kelly to be removed as a moderator for another Fox Republican primary debate, citing a “conflict of interest and bias” on her part. Trump ended up skipping that debate entirely, deciding instead to hold his own event.
On Twitter, Trump has taken aim at Fox news-side anchors Shannon Bream, Neil Cavuto, Shepard Smith, and Chris Wallace. He’s slammed Fox’s weekend programming, Fox’s polling operation, and even Fox’s decision to interview Democrats. He’s lamented that Fox was “doing nothing to help Republicans, and me, get re-elected on November 3rd” and written that the channel “doesn’t deliver for US anymore.”