Fox News’ Megyn Kelly has spent the past year taking on some of the country’s most prominent conservative leaders.

First, it was Republican candidate Donald Trump, whom she asked tough questions about women—an issue that has dogged Trump throughout the election—in one of the earliest primary debates. That set off months of back-and-forth between Kelly and Trump, ending with him appearing on her Fox primetime special for a one-on-one interview.

Then, she told lawyers behind-the-scenes that she, too, had been sexually harassed by then Fox News Chief Roger Ailes after former Fox & Friends anchor Gretchen Carlson filed charges against him. Kelly’s coming forward was seen to be the one of the final factors that forced Ailes out.

And then on Tuesday evening, Kelly got into it with Republican commentator and former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, with Gingrich telling Kelly, “you are fascinated with sex,” because she continues to report on women accusing Trump of groping and forcibly kissing them. Kelly ended that segment on her Fox News show, The Kelly File, saying: “We’re going to have to leave it at that and you can take your anger issues and spend some time working on them, Mr. Speaker. Thanks for being here.”

Now, the former lawyer is taking on Rupert Murdoch, CEO of Fox News and co-executive chairman of 21st Century Fox, asking for a $5 million-plus annual raise to more than $20 million to put her on equal footing with Fox News’ other big star, Bill O’Reilly. The Kelly File averages 2.7 million viewers while The O’Reilly Factor averages 3.2 million viewers, reports the Wall Street Journal.

Murdoch told the WSJ that Kelly is important to the network and that he hopes to get her contract resigned “very soon.” And although he doesn’t want to lose her, he also said “we have a deep bench of talent, many of whom would give their right arm for her spot.”

Other outlets are said to be interested in poaching Kelly, including ABC and CNN. Over the course of this election, CNN has made up a fair amount of ground on Fox News. In October, CNN led all cable news networks among adults 25-54, the key advertising demographic for those networks, and concluded its first four-week streak of wins in that demo in 15 years, reports The Hollywood Reporter. Fox News still leads among total viewers, but that’s not the demo CNN — or advertisers — care about, CNN Chief Jeff Zucker tells THR.

On Nov. 9, Kelly will try out daytime, guest-hosting Disney-ABC’s Live with Kelly for the first time.

READ MORE: The Wall Street Journal, The Hollywood Reporter

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