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Type | Daily newspaper |
---|---|
Format | Tabloid |
Owner(s) | Zeitungsholding Hessen(90%) Karl-Gerold-Stiftung(10%) |
Editor | Thomas Kaspar |
Founded | 1 August 1945; 79 years ago (1945-08-01) |
Political alignment | Centre-left Social liberalism, Social democracy |
Language | de |
Headquarters | Frankfurt, Germany |
ISSN | 0940-6980 |
Website | www |
TheFrankfurter Rundschau (FR) is a German daily newspaper, based inFrankfurt am Main. TheRundschau's editorial stance issocial liberal. It holds that "independence,social justice and fairness" underlie its journalism. InPost-war GermanyFrankfurter Rundschau was for decades a leading force of German press. The newspaper was one of the first licensed by theUS military administration in 1945 and had a traditionalsocial democratic,antifascist andtrade union stand.
Starting with the decline of printed daily newspapers in the 2000s, theFR changed ownership several times, reduced its editorial team dramatically and today has little national significance.[1]Frankfurter Rundschau Druck and Verlagshaus GmbH filed for bankruptcy on 12 November 2012.[2][3] Then the paper was acquired byFrankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung and Frankfurter Societät (publisher of theFrankfurter Neue Presse) in 2013, by taking over just 28 full-time journalists.[4] TheFR editorial board continued to be bound by the legacy ofKarl Gerold and the commitment to a "left-liberal" political line, and was integrated in the national and international editorial and correspondents network of theDuMont Mediengruppe, the former majority owners. Theprivate foundation managing Karl Gerold's legacy still owns 10% of the shares. But all commercial activity of the paper, printing, selling advertisement and distribution was put in the hands of the Frankfurter Societät. TheFR printing enterprise was closed. The contracts for printingBILD-Zeitung and other papers went from theFR's printshop to the FAZ'sSocietätsdruckerei.
On 1 April 2018, the Frankfurter Societät's ninety per-cent share was sold to Zeitungsholding Hessen, an investment vehicle of the publisherDirk Ippen. In October 2021, Ippen blocked the publication by the Franfurter Rundschau of an investigative report on accusations of abuse of power made against former Bild editor,Julian Reichelt.
TheRundschau published its first issue on 1 August 1945 shortly after the end ofWorld War II in Europe. It was the first newspaper published in theUS sector in occupied Germany and the third newspaper inpost-war Germany. The licence was handed over to the first team of editors consisting of Emil Carlebach, Hans Etzkorn, Wilhelm Karl Gerst, Otto Grossmann, Wilhelm Knothe, Paul Rodemann and Arno Rudert, a progressive think-tank ofsocial democrats,political Catholics andcommunists, who had spent years in the resistance andNazi concentration camps or in exile. With the coming of theCold War, the American occupation authority forced all communist members of the editorial team to leave the paper two years later. In 1949 only Arno Rudert and Karl Gerold were left from the founding team. Gerold left SPD in the same year, to demonstrate his political independence.
Research by the Rundschau in the 1960s revealed, among other things, initiated theAuschwitz trials in Germany. At the end of the 1960s, the Frankfurter Rundschau uncovered the so-calledHS-30 scandal. The German government only procured the HS-30 armored personnel carrier for theBundeswehr because bribes had been paid to several responsible persons and illegal payments had been made to theCDU.
On 30 May 2007 theRundschau changed its format to the award-winning smallertabloid size.
The paper was awarded the European Newspaper of the Year in the category of judges' special recognition by the European Newspaper Congress in 2011.[5]
In the2013 elections the magazine was among the supporters of theSocial Democratic Party (SPD).[6]
The 1993 circulation of the paper was 189,000 copies.[7] In the first quarter of 2015, the newspaper boasted a circulation of around 70,000 copies.[8]
In 2019, the newspaper published an editorial titled "The Eternal Netanyahu" aboutPrime Minister of IsraelBenjamin Netanyahu. The name evoked aNazi Germany film titledThe Eternal Jew. Ulf Poschardt, editor-in-chief of German newspaperDie Welt, tweeted a condemnation of theFrankfurter Rundschau, as did a top journalist for German newspaperBild. TheFrankfurter Rundschau claimed that the association was accidental.[9]
In 2003, the paper had financial difficulties and was supported by a guarantee from the federal state ofHesse. In May 2004 theDeutsche Druck- und Verlagsgesellschaft [de] (DDVG), owned by the SPD, acquired 90 percent of the shares of the Druck- und Verlagshaus Frankfurt am Main (DuV), the publisher of the FR until then. The social democrats emphasized that they wanted to assure the future of one of the few left-liberal daily newspapers in Germany and asserted they would not exert influence on the articles. The social democrats also announced that they wanted to reduce their share to under 50 percent until 2006. In order to save the paper from insolvency, the DDVG soon drastically cut back expenditures. By means ofdismissals and outsourcing, the number of employees shrank within the last three years from 1700 to 750.
Amid speculation on DDVG's complaints about too friendly articles on the new left partyDie Linke and its plan to sell the majority of its shares (see article in the newspaperJunge Welt from 30 August 2007) Wolfgang Storz's term as editor-in-chief ended abruptly on 16 May 2006. The appointed next editor-in-chief was Uwe Vorkötter (effective 1 July 2006). Only a few days later, on 18 July 2007, the DDVG announced that it would sell 50 percent plus one share to the independent publishing companyM. DuMont Schauberg based inCologne, Germany. Today, DuMont Schauberg holds 50 percent plus one share, the DDVG owns 40 percent and the Karl-Gerold-Foundation holds 10 percent of the newspaper.
TheFrankfurter Rundschau and local newspaperFrankfurter Neue Presse were taken over by the Newspaper Holding Hessen, ZHH in spring 2018. The ZHH is majority owned by theIppen publishing group and the MDV media group of theGiessen publishing family Rempel ("Gießener Allgemeine").[10]
In the summer of 2023, the newspaper's employees will contact Ippen. In an open letter they wrote: "As a left-liberal newspaper, we stand up for justice in our articles. We report on wage inequality, labor disputes, gender equality and social politics." However, there is "enormous injustice in the pay of editorial members".[11] In December 2023, a conflict over uniform pay for FR employees escalated. FR employees have been demanding a collective agreement for months, but management wanted to avoid it. Negotiations with thever.di andDJV unions were broken off without result. Ippen increased the editor's salary across the board and viewed this as an enormous concession. Nevertheless, the publisher remained well below thecollective agreement for daily newspapers.[12]
The employees went on strike. Shortly afterwards, the managing director Max Rempel[13] fired three employeed editors and officially justified this by discontinuing the newspaper's unprofitable additional products.[14][15]
Judges' Special Recognition: Frankfurter Rundschau iPad, Deutschland.
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