BSkyB, the British satellite broadcaster partly owned by the Murdoch family, today said that James Murdoch had resigned as chairman to shield the company from the phone hacking scandal engulfing his family’s British newspaper outpost.
BSkyB said Nicholas Ferguson, currently deputy chairman, would succeed Murdoch as chairman. Murdoch continues to be a non-executive director of the company.
“I am aware that my role as chairman could become a lightning rod for BSkyB and I believe that my resignation will help to ensure that there is no false conflation with events at a separate organisation,” Murdoch wrote in a letter to the BSkyB board that was made public by the company.
The Murdoch family has a roughly 40 per cent stake in BSkyB that it had hoped to expand to strengthen its hold on the British satellite television business. Along with its news division, Sky also operates lucrative sports, movie and general entertainment channels.
But as the hacking scandal within its British newspaper holdings gripped the nation last July, the family announced that it was withdrawing a $12-billion bid to buy complete control of the broadcaster — a major setback to its corporate planning and European ambitions.
Almost immediately, analysts began speculating about Murdoch’s tenure as chairman.
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The news that he was stepping down came only weeks after Murdoch resigned as head of his family’s scandal-ridden newspaper properties in Britain.
At the time, he said he would concentrate on his family’s lucrative television properties. He also said he would work from the New York headquarters of News Corporation, the global media conglomerate run by his father, Rupert Murdoch, who is chairman and chief executive of the company.
James Murdoch, 39, is deputy chief operating officer of News Corp, according to its website.
His resignation as executive chairman of News International, the British newspaper subsidiary of News Corp, came at a moment of intensifying scrutiny of the Murdoch tabloids at the centre of the British hacking scandal, The Sun and the now-defunct News of the World.
The papers’ reporters, editors and corporate executives, including Murdoch, have been the focus of overlapping investigations by the police, Parliament and the judiciary into a pattern of widespread phone hacking and payoffs to the police and other public officials.
Britain’s regulator for the communications industry, Ofcom, said last month it was stepping up its investigation into whether James Murdoch was a “fit and proper” person to be part of the BSkyB board, given the investigations.
On Tuesday, Ferguson, his successor as chairman of BSkyB, said he had thanked James Murdoch “for the outstanding contribution he has made.”
“The board’s support for James and belief in his integrity remain strong,” he said. “We understand his decision to step aside at this time."
Murdoch has been shedding titles since the scandal heated up.
Last month, in a continuing effort to distance himself from News Corporation’s British newspaper unit, Murdoch stepped down from the board of Times Newspapers Holdings. That entity was created to safeguard the editorial independence of The Times of London and The Sunday Times after the media conglomerate bought the British newspapers in 1981, according to public filings with the British government.
In March, the auction house Sotheby’s said in a filing with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission that James Murdoch would not return to his board position. Earlier this year he gave up his position on the board of the pharmaceutical company GlaxoSmithKline.
© 2012 The New York Times News Service