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France: Le Monde journalists on strike
By Kumaran Ira and Alex Lantier
16 April 2008
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Staff at Le Monde, Frances centre-left daily paper
of record, went on a one-day strike to protest planned job cuts
and the spinning off of several associated publications. About
100 employees of the corporate Le Monde Group demonstrated
outside Le Mondes headquarters in Paris.
Tuesdays edition of the paper did not come out after
journalists walked off the job. At the same time, some employees
of Le Mondes web site Le Monde Interactif (www.lemonde.fr),
a separate entity within the corporate Le Monde group,
refused to update the site with articles from the print edition
out of solidarity with their colleagues.
The 24-hour strike took place after Le Mondes
management announced a large-scale restructuring plan on April
4, eliminating 129 jobsincluding 90 jobs in the newsroom,
or one quarter of Le Mondes journalistsin an
effort to stem continuing losses and resolve the papers
indebtedness.
Eric Fottorino, a Le Monde editorialist who is CEO of
Le Monde Group, told staff that the massive job cuts were
the only way to keep the paper afloat. In an article published
in the April 4 edition of Le Monde, Fottorino and his deputy
David Guiraud wrote, Rejecting [the plan] would deny us
any chance of success and put the future of the group in peril.
The restructuring plan would also spin off non-strategic
or loss-making publications included in the Le Monde Group,
such as Fleurus Presse (a youth publisher), the Editions de lEtoile
(which edits the film journal Cahiers du Cinéma),
the monthly Danser, and the network of religious-themed
libraries La Procure.
Christine Chombeau, Le Monde delegate for the National
Union of Journalists (SNJ), told Le Journal du Dimanche,
We have unfortunately seen other restructuring plans, but
each time, they were based on voluntary departures. Now, management
is giving itself the right to refuse voluntary departures and
is considering involuntary layoffs from the outset. It is a total
break with the habits of our firm.
An April 11 joint communiqué of the SNJ with the press
federations of the CGT, CFDT, and CGC trade union confederations
stated: The worries of Le Mondes employees
is of a piece with those of an entire profession that is under
attack in every publication. There is no publication that is not
seeing job cuts, degraded working conditions, and economic pressure.
The trade unions also criticised management for categorically
refusing the idea of a reduction, even of a symbolic character,
of the firms top salaries.
In a general assembly on April 14, Le Monde voted a
motion to negotiate a new plan with management. The motion passed
overwhelmingly: 251 votes for, none against, with 4 abstentions.
The motion also required management to abstain from involuntary
layoffs and spinning off other corporate assets of Le Monde
Group.
In an April 14 interview with AFP-TV, Fottorino replied he
understood the emotions felt by Le Mondes staff,
and even share it, but then announced that he was determined
to carry out the original plan. He said it was his responsibility
to inscribe in this plan the possibility of forced layoffs,
adding: It is the success of this plan that will allow for
the continued independence of Le Monde.
On April 15, employees at Fleurus Presse and Télérama
met in general assemblies and voted to strike, beginning Thursday.
There will be another assembly of Le Monde staff on April
16.
Fottorinos invocation of editorial and corporate independence
as the motivation for laying off one quarter of Le Mondes
journalists is utterly cynical.
The papers financial troubles are largely due to 150
million euros in debts, which the paper has acquired since Le
Monde Groups initial public offering of stock in 2001,
during a massive campaign of acquisitions of other publications,
publishers, and web sites. The Group posted a loss of 15.6 million
euros in 2006 and 14.3 million euros in 2006. The papers
daily circulation was roughly 358,000 copies in 2007, down from
398,000 in 2003. It contributed 6 million euros to the Le Monde
Groups 2007 losses.
In May 2007, the papers then-CEO, editorialist Jean-Marie
Colombani, was forced out by a vote of the committee of the newspapers
journalists, over opposition to Colombanis acquisitions
strategy. As he left the group posting record losses, Colombani
awarded himself a 950,000-euro bonus.
Lagardère Groupa conglomerate with interests in
media, publishing, retail and aeronautics/defense, whose CEO Arnaud
Lagardère is a close associate of President Nicolas Sarkozyowns
17 percent of Le Monde Group and 34 percent of Le Monde
Interactif. Business magazine La Tribune commented
on April 14, Lagardère Group...is at its wits
end. It does not hide its desire to take control of [Le Monde
Group] with the Spanish firm Prisa (which owns 15 percent of Le
Mondes capital), if there is a further recapitalisation.
What is ultimately at stake in plans for large-scale layoffs
at Le Mondeand the inevitable decrease in quality
of the papers coverageis the loss of the papers
political independence and its conversion into a mouthpiece of
the current leaders of the French political and corporate elite.
Le Monde has until now presented a paradox: though a thoroughly
establishment publication, it has retained a certain operational
independence from the day-to-day propagandistic needs of the state.
It was founded in 1944 at the suggestion of Charles de Gaulle
during the Liberation of France from the Nazis. It took over the
office and presses of Le Temps, the former French newspaper
of record, which had disgraced itself by its collaborationist
line during the occupation. To head Le Monde, de Gaulle
picked Hubert Beuve-Méry, a former Le Temps journalist
who had joined the Resistance, after being for a time a teacher
at Vichys pro-fascist National School for Cadre at Uriage.
During the high tide of torture by French soldiers in Algiers
during the Algerian War of Independence from France, Le Monde
published the Report of the Commission to Preserve Individual
Rights and Liberties, on December 14, 1957. In the following years,
Beuve-Méry and other editorial staff were repeatedly targeted
for assassination. During the May-June 1968 struggles, Le Monde
was popular with students, and its circulation hit a high of 800,000.
After 1968, Le Monde transformed itself into a largely
employee-owned company, with journalists, printers, and other
employees holding 49 percent of the stock.
Le Monde backed Socialist President François
Mitterrand (1981-1995) in presidential elections, but also later
published an account of the sinking of a Greenpeace vessel on
Mitterrands orders in the 1980s, to prevent it from protesting
French nuclear weapons trials.
Recent controversies over Le Monde have taken on an
ever more bitter and more openly political character.
In 2003, Philippe Cohen and Pierre Péan published a
long, right-wing denunciation of Le MondeLa Face
cache du Monde (Le Mondes Hidden Face)for
betraying state secrets. Ultimately, this led in 2005 to the resignation
of editorial chief Edwy Plenel, a former member of the pseudo-Trotskyist
LCR (Revolutionary Communist League). Plenel and the LCR continue
to have support inside Le Monde, however, notably in columnist
Sylvia Zappis promotion of LCR presidential candidate Olivier
Besancenot.
The year 2007 saw the ouster of Alain Minc, chairman of Le
Mondes supervisory board and a collaborator of Jean-Marie
Colombani. Minc, not a Le Monde reporter, is a businessman
and a graduate of the exclusive ENA National Administration School,
made notorious for his 2001 conviction for plagiarism in his biography
of SpinozaSpinoza, a Jewish Novel He is reportedly
close to Sarkozy, who uses him as an advisor on media matters.
In October 2007, Minc agreed to leave Le Monde after trying
to force employees to keep him on as head of the supervisory board
despite having failed to obtain the required number of votes.
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