Dangerous liaisons between press and power
Wednesday 27 February 2008
French daily "Le Parisien" has caused a stir by admitting its interview with President Sarkozy was modified by the president's office, raising questions about the link between French media and their sources.
Wednesday 27 February 2008
By Marie Valla / FRANCE 24Even before the dust has had a chance to settle from French President Nicolas Sarkozy’s ‘get lost you cretin’ mishap at the Agricultural Fair, a new Elysée faux pas has become the talk of the French media. French Daily Le Parisien admitted on Wednesday that the President’s interview published in the paper the day before had not only been reread but also modified by the Elysée press service.
This infringement by the Sarkozy administration blurs the lines between politics and journalism. “In
In the interview, Sarkozy stands by Saturday’s outburst adding that “Just because you become President doesn’t mean that you suddenly become something people can wipe their feet on.” L’Elysee thought best to add the sentence “At the Fair, I should not have answered,” thereby significantly changing the tone of his initial answer. “This sounds like a press aide desperately trying to do damage control after the fact,” says Christopher Dickey, Newsweek bureau chief in
But the bigger problem is the fact that the Le Parisien editorial team - arguing that they were providing useful information to the reader - failed to mention which portions of the interview were an addition. “This is inappropriate,” says Stefan Simons,
“Here’s what a
In
Yet, the differences between an Anglo-Saxon tradition of journalists’ independence from sources and the sometimes incestuous French ways are diminishing. In Europe and the
“Over the last 20 years, powerful politicians have come to understand that they can control the media by controlling access,” says Newsweek’s Dickey. “The journalists who cover the White House or the Elysée know that if they cross the line, they won’t get access anymore.” Given the multiplication of news outlets and the their relative loss of influence, the names Le Monde or New York Times aren’t a big enough guarantee anymore that access will be given even in the face of negative coverage.
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