In 1886, Lovekin was a senior reporter on the
Fremantle Herald: "the colony's first radical newspaper", according to the
Australian Dictionary of Biography. The
Herald was absorbed by the owners of a rival newspaper,
Daily News, and in 1890, Lovekin became
company secretary and director. In 1893, in England, he bought machinery which enabled
Daily News to install the first rotary printing press and
Linotype typesetting machines in Western Australia. By 1894, he was managing director and editor of
Daily News. In 1896, Lovekin launched the
Morning Herald in competition with
John Winthrop Hackett's
The West Australian. He provoked Australia's first newspaper
strike in 1912, when he rejected a claim from
Daily News journalists for equal pay with
West Australian journalists. The strike lasted a week before Lovekin granted the claim. In 1916, he became sole owner of the
Daily News. By the end of
World War I, he was very wealthy thanks to stockpiles of
newsprint he sold to newspapers affected by wartime shortages. Lovekin sold the
Daily News to
News Ltd for £86,000 in 1926 (). ==Politics==