Sky Italia hard man called in to replace Rebekah Brooks

 

Rupert Murdoch today helicoptered in one of his most political and combative lieutenants to replace Rebekah Brooks as chief executive of his troubled UK newspaper empire.

Tom Mockridge arrives from running Sky Italia, where he clashed with Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi and also former US Vice-President Al Gore after dropping his liberal TV channel in Italy.

Mockridge will have a huge in-tray as he battles to contain the phone-hacking scandal and tries to steady nerves at News International, owner of The Sun, The Times and Sunday Times.

One of his key priorities is likely to be launching The Sun On Sunday to replace the News of the World, which was axed last week.

James Murdoch, chief executive of News Corp's international operations, who has already worked closely with Mockridge, said: "I believe that Tom is the best person to move the company forward to a brighter future."

Murdoch said: "Tom is an outstanding executive with unrivalled experience across our journalism and television businesses. He has proven himself to be a very effective operator in his time at Sky Italia."

He also pointed out Mockridge had launched a new channel, TG24, "which has set a new standard for independent journalism in Italy".

Mockridge, who hails from New Zealand, is a trusted figure who has run Sky Italia since launch in 2003. News Corp wholly owns Sky Italia, unlike BSkyB in which it has a 39% stake.

In addition, Mockridge is a non-executive director of BSkyB which is significant as News Corp is widely expected to try to mount a fresh bid for the British TV giant once the hacking furore subsides.

There has been speculation that News Corp could be forced to sell off its UK papers to appease angry shareholders on Wall Street, which would mean Mockridge being involved in any sale operation.

But Rupert Murdoch has rejected any talk of a sale, dismissing it yesterday as "pure rubbish" in an interview with the Wall Street Journal.

Mockridge is a controversial figure in Italy as he has repeatedly clashed with Berlusconi and the Italian premier's rival Mediaset TV empire.

Gore was furious with Sky Italia, claiming it cut his Current TV channel because it knew that it was about to air a programme presented by a critic of Murdoch, the liberal American commentator Keith Olbermann.

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