Robert Thomson
Robert Thomson (born March 11, 1961, Echuca, Australia) is an Australian journalist, newspaper editor, and executive who became the first non-British editor (2002–08) of The Times of London. He later served as managing editor (2008–13) of The Wall Street Journal before becoming CEO (2013– ) of News Corporation.
Thomson was the son of a bar owner who later became a newspaper proofreader. The young Thomson entered journalism at age 17, working as a copyboy and then cadet on The Herald in Melbourne (now the Melbourne Herald Sun) and later at the Sydney Morning Herald. In 1985, when he was 24, he was appointed the Sydney Morning Herald’s Beijing correspondent. In China he started working freelance for the Financial Times (FT) and also met his future wife, Wang Ping, a local computer worker and daughter of a People’s Liberation Army general. Three years later he moved to Japan as the FT’s Tokyo correspondent.
In addition to his orthodox journalistic strengths, Thomson’s ability to embrace the culture of others rather than impose his own values (by his late 20s he had become fluent in both Mandarin Chinese and Japanese) attracted the attention of the senior management at the FT, which was seeking to establish itself as a global business daily. In 1994 Thomson was sent to London to run the FT’s large foreign desk. Two years later he was appointed editor of the paper’s weekend features section. In 1998 he moved to New York City as managing editor of the FT’s U.S. edition, and in three years he increased daily circulation from 32,000 to 123,000.
Thomson had hoped to succeed to the editorship of the FT in London when Richard Lambert departed in 2001, but he was passed over in favour of another candidate. Thomson then was approached by fellow Australian Rupert Murdoch to become editor of The Times, one of the world’s oldest and most distinguished daily newspapers and one of the U.K.’s toughest newspaper critics of the European Union. (In contrast, the FT was one of the strongest pro-Europe newspapers.) Thomson made the move in 2002 without any personal record of sharing his new proprietor’s hostility to European integration. His appointment was widely seen as an indication that Murdoch would allow the U.K. papers in his News International group—which also included The Sunday Times and the down-market tabloids The Sun, a daily, and News of the World, a Sunday paper—to follow different editorial policies in this highly charged area.
Thomson took over at a challenging time. By early 2002 sales had slipped to about 700,000, while the paper’s main rival, the Daily Telegraph, continued to sell 1,000,000 copies daily. Sharp reductions in advertising revenue—common to many media organizations following the terrorist attacks in the U.S. in September 2001—also had increased pressure on The Times’s finances. Under Thomson, The Times issued a compact edition and intensified its focus on business, sports, politics, and international affairs. In 2007 Murdoch appointed Thomson editor in chief of Dow Jones & Company, and the following year he became managing editor of its flagship newspaper, The Wall Street Journal. He subsequently left those posts to become (2013– ) CEO of the newly reformed News Corporation (often called News Corp), which focused on print ventures.