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French independent online newspaper From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mediapart (French: [medjapaʁt]) is an independent French investigative online newspaper created in 2008 by Edwy Plenel,[1] former editor-in-chief of Le Monde. It is published in French, English, and Spanish, and has produced hundreds of investigations over the past 15 years, on political corruption, financial corruption, and environmental damage, as well as on social, sexual, and police violence. In March 2021, Mediapart reached more than 220,000 paid subscribers.[4]
You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in French. (March 2024) Click [show] for important translation instructions.
|
Seuls nos lecteurs peuvent nous acheter ("Only our readers can buy us") | |
Format | Online |
---|---|
Founder(s) | Edwy Plenel |
President | Carine Fouteau |
Editor-in-chief | Lénaïg Bredoux Valentine Oberti |
General manager | Cécile Sourd |
Staff writers | ~70 |
Founded | 2008 |
Political alignment | Left-wing[1][2] |
Language | French, English, Spanish |
Headquarters | Paris, France |
Circulation | 220,000 (paid subscribers) (as of 31 December 2023)[3] |
Website | mediapart.fr |
Mediapart's income is only derived from paid subscribers.[1] Unlike most French newspapers, Mediapart refuses to display any advertising. It also refuses all commercial partnerships.[5] Its official slogan is "Only Our Readers Can Buy Us". The New York Times has called Mediapart "France's leading investigative news site".[6] The Financial Times described the editor as an "ex-Trotskyist rocking the French establishment".[7]
Mediapart consists of two main sections: Le Journal, run by professional journalists, and Le Club, a collaborative forum edited by its subscriber community. In 2011, Mediapart launched FrenchLeaks, a whistleblower website inspired by WikiLeaks.[8][9] Mediapart was originally a for-profit business. In 2018, the newspaper was converted by shareholders into a non-profit trust in order to fully protect its independence.[10] Le Fond pour une Presse Libre is a non-profit trust created to secure the financial and editorial independence of Mediapart in perpetuity and defend freedom of the press.[10] By design, trust board members do not have any authority over the newsroom.[11]
Mediapart has played a central role in the investigation and revelation of several major French political scandals, including:
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