LA Times editor is forced out
Dean Baquet, the editor of The Los Angeles Times who defied orders
from his corporate bosses to cut jobs, was forced out of his own job
today, shocking his newsroom just as it was gearing up to cover election
returns.
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Baquet (left) with his publisher the day he was appointed as the
Editor-LA Times |
He is to leave his post on Friday and be replaced by James O'Shea,
the managing editor of The Chicago Tribune, who will start Monday.
Mr. Baquet's departure follows that of the paper's publisher, Jeffrey
M. Johnson, who with Mr. Baquet in September had openly objected to cuts
ordered by Tribune Company and was fired last month.
David Hiller, who replaced Mr. Johnson as publisher, said in a
statement that he had been having discussions with Mr. Baquet about
staffing levels and that the company maintained its position that
further cuts might be necessary. But Mr. Baquet still considered them
excessive.
"After considerable discussion during the past several weeks, Dean
and I concluded that we have significant differences on the future
direction of The Times," Mr. Hiller said.
Colleagues of Mr. Baquet's said the firing had less to do with a
dispute over job cuts than his vocal resistance to them, made plain in a
speech last month in New Orleans in which he encouraged editors at other
newspapers to "push back" against owners who wanted to cut newsroom
staffs.
In fact, when Mr. Hiller addressed the newsroom, he said he expected
no job cuts at least for the rest of this year, and he told editors that
it was still possible that any further cuts could be reached through
attrition, according to people at the paper.
Mr. Hiller said in an interview later that public debate was not a
"fatal problem." But he added, of Mr. Baquet's speech in New Orleans: "I
did not think it was helpful to Dean and me in working through things.
My issue was what it said about whether we saw eye to eye on how we lead
this great newspaper forward."
Colleagues said Mr. Baquet was considering having lunch next week
with David Geffen, one of three local billionaires who have expressed
interest in acquiring The Los Angeles Times. The Tribune Company, under
pressure from investors, is considering selling some or all of its
assets, which also include 10 other papers and two dozen television
stations.
The hope of some in the newsroom is that Mr. Geffen, or someone, buys
the paper and rehires Mr. Baquet as editor.The Los Angeles Times has
steadily lost circulation over the years, falling to 776,000 daily as of
Sept. 30 from a peak of 1.2 million in 1990.
The two-month showdown in Los Angeles has been a dramatic example of
the conflict between many newsrooms and boardrooms across the country as
newspapers face an economic slump and continued demands by Wall Street
for improved financial results.
The stock prices of most public newspaper companies have fallen over
the last two years, yet many of their publications remain profitable.
The Los Angeles Times reported that its operating profit margin was 20
percent, higher than that of the average Fortune 500 company.
Mr. Hiller said in his statement that changes were "threatening the
financial position of the whole industry," and that the cuts were not
about maintaining high profit margins. "Look no further than recent
reports on other large metro papers in Boston, Philadelphia, Dallas and
San Francisco," he said.
Many colleagues of Mr. Baquet said they have considered his departure
a matter of time. The news was supposed to be announced on Thursday, but
word began leaking today and by mid-afternoon Mr. Baquet had confirmed
it to his staff. "Believe me, I didn't want it to come out this way," he
wrote in a memo. He could not be reached for comment.
Many on the staff of The Los Angeles Times said the news caught them
off guard and threw the paper into turmoil, coming on election night,
one of the busiest and most complicated for news organizations. Mr.
Baquet's departure, on top of the potential sale of the paper, creates
even further uncertainty on the staff.
Mr. O'Shea, the new editor of The Los Angeles Times, was named
managing editor at The Chicago Tribune in 2001. Before then, he was
deputy managing editor for news and worked at the paper in a variety of
assignments, having joined the paper in 1979 after working as a
reporter, editor and Washington correspondent for The Des Moines
Register.
Mr. Baquet's staff gave him a sustained ovation as he stood on a desk
in the newsroom to announce that he was leaving. He said he did not want
them to dwell on the last month but to remember the last six years,
during which the paper broke news, forced laws to be changed and won
Pulitzer Prizes. His management team stood behind him.
Mr. Hiller climbed on the desk afterward. He said he had hoped this
day would never come. He also said that there would be no reductions at
least for the rest of the year, but that The Los Angeles Times could not
escape the changes that are sweeping the industry.
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