
Paul Marshall: Britain's anti-woke media baron
He already co-owned brash current affairs television channel GB News, a sort of British Fox News, and is the owner of respected centre-right-leaning news and opinion website UnHerd.
Marshall -- who himself has been on a journey from supporting centrist politics to more right-wing causes in recent years -- got into media after making a fortune in finance.
He is worth more than £850 million ($1.1 billion), according to this year's edition of the Sunday Times rich list.
During a recent lecture at Oxford University, Marshall said he became a press baron "in an almost unplanned way".
"I was a frustrated consumer," he said, denouncing what he called a "biased mainstream media" where "truth was sacrificed and trust was lost".
During his media journey, he says he has "discovered a set of illiberal practices and a dominating mindset which I believe need to be challenged."
'Generating influence'
Born in Ealing, London, in August 1959, the public-school-educated Marshall studied history at Oxford before enrolling at the prestigious French business school INSEAD.
He made his wealth as a successful hedge fund manager, co-founding Marshall Wace.
Along the way, he was a donor and member of the Liberal Democrats, a pro-European, social democratic party that usually finishes third in UK general elections.
But Marshall left the Lib Dems in 2015 and donated to the Leave campaign in the referendum on European Union membership the following year.
He told the Financial Times in 2017: "Most people in Britain do not want to become part of a very large country called Europe. They want to be part of a country called Britain."
"He's different from Murdoch, who used his media empire to make money," Matt Walsh, head of the journalism school at Cardiff University, told AFP.
"Marshall was rich before acquiring his media," Walsh added, noting his outlets are currently loss-making.
"It's about generating influence, presenting his view of the world."
Marshall "was a right-wing Lib Dem but gradually shifted further to the right", he said.
Marshall donated once to the Conservative Party and founded UnHerd in July 2017, a website "for people who dare to think for themselves".
In 2021, the financier shook up Britain's TV news ecosystem when he helped found GB News, the country's first new news channel since Murdoch's Sky News launched in 1989.
The channel, whose logo adopts the colours of the British flag, is proudly anti-woke, and its presenters regularly rail against immigration and net zero climate policies.
GB News has on several occasions fallen foul of Britain's broadcasting watchdog Ofcom, which says its use of politicians as interviewers breaches impartiality rules.
But the provocative channel is growing in popularity. TV rating agency Barb found that in November 2024 GB News overtook Sky News for monthly live viewings for the first time.
'Under-represented views'
According to Barb, GB News enjoyed an average of more than 3.1 million monthly viewings in the year to April.
Its accounts published in February show that despite doubling turnover to more than £15.7 million, GB News made a pre-tax loss of £33.4 million for the year ending May 31, 2024.
"He is keen about the promotion of what he sees as underrepresented ideas and viewpoints," a source close to Marshall told AFP.
The mogul largely shuns publicity, as his communications team reminded AFP, declining a request for an interview.
Marshall is a committed Christian who was knighted in 2016 for services to education and philanthropy.
He launched ARK School in 2002, which has helped nearly 30,000 students from modest backgrounds. Marshall has also donated more than £80 million to the London School of Economics.
His wife is French and their son Winston played the banjo in Mumford & Sons before leaving the folk-rock band after reportedly falling out with bandmates over his conservative views.
In 2022, Marshall co-founded the Alliance for Responsible Citizenship, an international conference of conservative lawmakers and right-wing influencers.
To the Hope Not Hate organisation, Marshall is far right. Last year, it uncovered an anonymous account on X in which he had liked tweets calling for the mass deportation of immigrants.
A spokesman for Marshall said then the tweets did not "represent his opinions".
© 2025 AFP
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

LeMonde
an hour ago
- LeMonde
'The end of the UK's tax privilege for non-domiciled residents is an opportunity for France'
In April, the United Kingdom ended a tax privilege that had existed for more than two centuries: the non-domiciled (or "non-dom") status. Seen as a passport for tax optimization, this status applied to wealthy individuals living in the UK without being officially domiciled there: they were exempt from taxes on income earned abroad, provided those earnings were not repatriated to the UK. The "non-dom" status had helped make London a top destination for the global financial elite. While the British government hopes this reform will generate new tax revenue, it could also trigger an exodus of capital and talent of all kinds. In the contest to attract mobile wealth, and in a highly competitive environment, France has a valuable card to play. In 2023, there were nearly 74,000 beneficiaries of the "non-dom" status. This represented a considerable source of indirect tax revenue through luxury consumption, real estate investment and tuition fees paid to schools and universities. Their contribution to London's ecosystem thus went far beyond just income taxes. To soften the immediate impact of abolishing the status, the reform introduced a new transitional regime: a four-year exemption on foreign income for new arrivals, regardless of their domicile status. After this period, residents will be taxed on all global income. The British government is counting on an additional £3.2 billion (about €3.7 billion) in annual tax revenue. But the situation is complex, and the forecasts are not optimistic. The Adam Smith Institute has predicted that up to 30% of current "non-doms" could leave the country, causing a loss of human and financial capital that would be hard to offset. Meanwhile, the Henley Private Wealth Migration Report 2025 estimates that 16,500 millionaires could leave the UK in 2025. The situation is becoming increasingly serious, especially since Brexit, and London has lost a spot each year in the Forbes ranking of cities with the most billionaires in the world.

LeMonde
3 hours ago
- LeMonde
Tour de France: Cycling's showcase remains heavily sponsored by fossil fuels
On the winding roads of the Tour de France, the bicycle embodies the ideal of low-impact mobility. But behind the celebration and athletic endeavor, another mechanism is at work: the symbolic reconquering of environmental issues by champions of the fossil fuel industry. At the end of June, the French oil giant TotalEnergies announced it had signed an official three-year partnership with the Tour de France, starting in 2026. The company is also the main sponsor of one of the participating teams, which bears its name. Within the Tour's peloton, six other teams (out of 23) are directly or indirectly connected to the fossil fuel industry: UAE Team Emirates-XRG, backed by the United Arab Emirates, one of the world's leading oil producers; Ineos Grenadiers, named after the British petrochemical giant Ineos and an off-road vehicle, the Grenadier, made by its automotive division; Bahrain Victorious, backed by Bahrain, a country whose economy is heavily dependent on oil production; Jayco-AlUla, whose name refers to the Saudi city of Al-Ula that is at the heart of a major tourism initiative by one of the world's top oil producers; XDS-Astana, funded by a sovereign wealth fund supporting Kazakhstan's oil and gas company; and Uno-X Mobility, a chain of gas stations present in Norway and Denmark.


Fashion Network
4 hours ago
- Fashion Network
China's Li & Fung acquires Orrsum
Chinese conglomerate Li & Fung announced on Friday the acquisition of UK-based hosiery, underwear, and loungewear maker, Orrsum. Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed. Under the deal, Orrsum will operate as part of LF Europe and continue to be led by William Orr. The British business will leverage the Hong Kong-based firm's AI-enabled digital infrastructure and sourcing network across 40 economies to strengthen supply chain agility, improve speed-to-market, and expand into new geographies and channels, according to a press release. 'Joining the Li & Fung family is a milestone for Orrsum,' said William Orr, CEO of Orrsum, which delivers over 50 million pairs of socks annually to more than 5,000 retail doors worldwide. 'With access to their global platform and advanced technology, we can expand our footprint, enhance service levels, and unlock new growth opportunities for our customers and partners.' The deal is Li & Fung's first acquisition in over ten years, and marks the first takeover since it went private in 2020. The supply chain management company said the deal is a strategic pivot toward platform-based growth, focused on scalable product categories, digital integration, and resilient supply chain solutions. 'Looking ahead, our growth will be fueled by a combination of disciplined organic expansion and selective acquisitions that strengthen our platform and extend our category leadership,' said Joseph Phi, group CEO of Li & Fung. 'This acquisition reflects our renewed momentum through expanded product specialization, leveraging our resilient, technology-enabled, and customer-focused global supply chain.' Founded in 1998, Orrsum makes hoisery and underwear for global brands including Ellesse, Ted Baker, Nautica, Umbro, Penguin, Hype, and Coca Cola, among others.