From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Libération (affectionately known as
Libé) is a French daily newspaper founded in Paris in 1973 by Jean-Paul Sartre, Philippe Gavi,
Bernard Lallement and Jean-Claude Vernier, Pierre Victor alias Benny Lévy and Serge
July in the wake of the protest movements of May 1968. Broadly
speaking, Libération's editorial point of view is
currently center-left. Originally a leftist
newspaper, it has undergone a number of shifts, in particular
during the 1980s and 1990s, and, more recently, since Edouard de Rothschild's
entrance in its capital (37%) in January 2005. Serge July's
campaign for the "yes" vote in the referendum on the TCE
(Treaty establishing a Constitution for Europe) alienated it from a
number of its left-wing readers. As of 2007, it has a circulation
of about 140,000[1].
Libé was also the first French daily to have a
website.
History
First period
(1973-1981)
Libération was founded by Jean-Paul Sartre and has been
published from 3 February 1973. Sartre remained editor of
Libération until May 24, 1974.
The paper was initially run along non-hierarchical lines, with all staff – from the
editor-in-chief to the janitor – receiving the same salary, but
this later gave way to a "normal set-up". In the early 1980s it
began to take advertisements and allowed external bodies to have a
stake in its financing, which it had completely refused before, but
continued to maintain a left-of-centre editorial stance.
Second period (1981 to
present)
After several crises, Libération temporarily stopped
being published in February 1981. It resumed publication on May 13
under a new format, with Serge July as new director.
Libération has a decidedly self-described progressive
editorial line, generally supportive of causes such as anti-racism,
feminism, and workers' rights. Although it is not affiliated with
any political party, it has, from its theoretical origins in the
May 1968 turmoil in France, a left-wing slant [2].
According to co-founder and former director Serge July,
Libé was an activist newspaper that, however, does not
support any particular political party, acts as a counter-power,
and generally has bad relations with both left-wing and right-wing
administrations. Libé's opinion pages (rebonds)
publish views from many political standpoints. An example of their
proclaimed independent, "counter-power" slant is when in 1993
Libération leaked Socialist
president François Mitterrand's illegal
wiretapping program.
Libé is known for its sometimes alternative points of
view on cultural and social events. For instance, in addition to
reports about crimes and other events, it also chronicles daily
criminal trials, bringing in a more human vision of petty
criminals. As Serge July puts it , "the equation of
Libération consisted in combining counter-culture and
political radicalism" [3].
Critics contend, however, that this radicalism has largely receded
since the 1970s and that Libé is no longer a truly
left-wing newspaper. The editors' decision, in 2005, to support the
Treaty
establishing a Constitution for Europe (TCE) was criticized by
many of its readers, who later decided to vote "no" to a treaty
seen as too liberal,
lacking social views deemed necessary to the solid foundation of a
"European nation".
Édouard de
Rothschild's involvement
In 2005 Libération badly needed funds, and Serge July
strove to convince the board to allow Édouard de Rothschild to buy a stake in the
paper. The board agreed on 20 January, 2005. Social conflicts arose
shortly after. On 25 November, 2005, the paper went on strike, protesting
layoffs of 52 workers. [4].
Rothschild, who had promised he would not interfere in editorial
decisions, decided that he wasn't playing an active enough role in
the paper's management.[5]. In May
2006 the paper announced a week-end magazine called Libé
week-end, with a supplement called Ecrans (covering
television, internet and film), and another called R. (The
latter was abandoned in September of the same year)
On 13 June 2006, Serge July told the editorial staff that
Édouard de Rothschild was refusing to invest more money in the
paper unless Louis Dreyfus (directeur général) and himself left the
paper. July had accepted, believing the paper's future existence to
depend on his decision. The journalists were shocked. The next day,
they published a public statement praising the paper's founder and
expressing their worries about journalistic independence.[6]. Serge
July left the paper on 30 June, 2006[7].
A debate between Bernard Lallement, the first
administrator-manager of Libération and Edouard de
Rothschild took place in Le Monde newspaper. In a column published
on 4 July, 2006, Lallement argued that July's departure was the end
of an era where "writing meant something". Lallement painted a
bleak picture of Libération's future, as well as that of
the press as a whole. Criticizing Rothschild's interference,
Lallement quoted Sartre, who had famously said that "Money doesn't
have any ideas",[8]. Later,
on his blog, Lallement argued that Rothschild, who had had no
historic attachment to the paper, was only interested in making
money, not in the paper itself.[9] On 6
July, Rothschild declared: "Libération needs help and
moral, intellectual and financial support. Libération
doesn't need a requiem."[10]
Sixty-two employees (including 35 journalists, such as Antoine
de Gaudemar, chief editor, Sorj Chalandon, who was awarded the Albert Londres
prize, both present since the 1973 creation of Libé, or Pierre Haski, deputy
editor, present since 1981, were about to resign end of January
2007 (on a total of 276 employees). With the 55 others employees
who left the newspaper end of 2005, this makes a total of about 150
persons who were dismissed since Rothschild's entrance to the
capital, not including tens of resignations (Florence
Aubenas, Dominique Simonnot, Antoine de Baecque, Jean
Hatzfeld...) [11]
In May 2007, former Libération journalists, including
Pierre Haski or Pascal Riché (Op-Ed editor of
Libération) created the news website Rue 89.
Circulation statistics
| Year |
1999 |
2000 |
2001 |
2002 |
2003 |
2004 |
2004-2005 |
| Circulation |
169 427 |
169 011 |
171 551 |
164 286 |
158 115 |
146 109 |
140 334 [1] |
See also
References
- ^ a
b
OJD (Office de
justification de la diffusion, French NGO responsible for
surveying newspaper circulation
- ^ Interviews with journalists
from Libération (French)
- ^ Interview with Serge July
(on official French government website) (French)
- ^ Libération ? Un cas
d’école pour la presse française, L'Humanité,
May 26, 2006 (French)
- ^ Les raisons d'un divorce,
Le Figaro, June
14, 2006 (French)
- ^ Depuis trente-trois ans, Serge
July, cofondateur de «Libération»...., Libération,
June 14, 2006 (French)
- ^ « Pourquoi je quitte
"Libération" » ; Serge July ; Libération ; 30
juin 2006
« The orchestral conductor that I was bids you
farewell.
The journalist who I am is infinitely sad no longer to be
able to write here.
The reader that I shall remain bids you
good-bye. »
(article en
ligne)
- ^
Une complainte pour
Libé ; Le Monde 4
juillet 2006
- ^
Libé : un paradoxe très
cavalier 6 July, 2006
- ^
Libération n'a pas besoin de
requiem ; Le
Monde 6 juillet 2006
- ^
"Libération" : 62
candidats au départ, Le Monde, January 23, 2007 - URL accessed
on January 23, 2007 (French)
External
links