The Globe and Mail
is a Canadian
English language nationally distributed
newspaper, based in Toronto
and printed
in six cities across the country. With a weekly readership
of 935 000, it is Canada's largest-circulation national newspaper
and second-largest daily newspaper after the
Toronto Star and is widely described as
Canada's
newspaper of record. It
is owned by
CTVglobemedia.
History
The
predecessor to The Globe and Mail was The Globe, founded in
1844 by Scottish
immigrant
George Brown, who
would later become a Father of
Confederation. Brown's liberal politics led him to court
the support of the
Clear Grits,
precursor to the modern
Liberal
Party of Canada.
The Globe began in Toronto
as a weekly
party organ for Brown's Reform Party, but seeing the economic gains
that he could make in the newspaper business, Brown soon targeted a
wide audience of liberal minded freeholders. He selected as
the motto for the editorial page a quotation from
Junius, "The subject who is truly loyal to the Chief
Magistrate will neither advise nor submit to arbitrary measures."
The quotation is carried on the
editorial
page daily to this day.
By the 1850s,
The Globe had become an independent and
well-regarded daily newspaper.
It began distribution by railway to other
cities in Ontario
shortly
after Canadian
Confederation. At the dawn of the twentieth century,
The Globe added photography, a women's section, and the
slogan "Canada's National Newspaper," which remains on its
front-page banner today. It began opening bureaus and offering
subscriptions across Canada.
In 1936,
The Globe (which had a circulation of 78,000 by
this point) merged with
The Mail
and Empire (circulation 118,000), itself formed through a
merger in 1895 between
The Toronto
Mail and
Toronto
Empire.
The Mail was founded in 1872 by a rival
of Brown's,
Tory politician
Sir John A. Macdonald. Macdonald was the first
Prime Minister of Canada
and the founder of the party that spawned the modern
Conservative Party of Canada,
and
The Mail served as a Conservative Party organ.
With the merger,
The Globe became
The Globe and
Mail. Press reports at the time stated, "the minnow swallowed
the whale". The merger was arranged by
George McCullagh, who fronted for mining
magnate
William Henry Wright
and became the first publisher of
The Globe and Mail.
McCullagh committed suicide in 1952, and the newspaper was sold to
the Webster family of Montreal. As the paper lost ground to
The Toronto Star in the
local Toronto market, it began to expand its national
circulation.
In 1965, the paper was bought by Winnipeg-based
FP Publications, controlled by Brig. Richard
Malone, which owned a chain of local Canadian newspapers. FP put a
strong emphasis on the
Report on
Business section that was launched in 1962, thereby building
the paper's reputation as the voice of Toronto's business
community. FP Publications and The Globe and Mail were sold in 1980
to
The Thomson Corporation,
a company run by the family of
Kenneth
Thomson.
The Globe and Mail has always been a morning newspaper.
Since the
1980s, it has been printed in separate editions in six Canadian
cities: Halifax
, Montreal
, Toronto
(several editions), Winnipeg
(actually
printed in Brandon,
Manitoba
), Calgary
and Vancouver
. In 1995, the paper launched its Web site,
globeandmail.com, which had its own content and
journalists in addition to the content of the print newspaper. It
later spawned a companion Web site,
globeinvestor.com,
focusing on financial and investment-related news. In 2004, access
to some features of
globeandmail.com became restricted to
paid subscribers only.
Although the Thomson family has served as the figureheads of the
paper since 1980 and remains its largest shareholder, control of
the paper was sold to telecommunications company
BCE Inc. in 2001. A year earlier BCE had also
acquired
CTV, a major private
television network. With the sale, the
Globe and CTV were
merged into a new company named Bell Globemedia (now
CTVglobemedia), which became a subsidiary of
BCE with the Thomson family retaining a minority stake. In late
2005, BCE reduced its stake in Bell Globemedia, leaving the Thomson
family, through its holding company Woodbridge, with a 40-percent
stake. BCE,
Torstar (owner of the
Toronto Star) and the
Ontario Teachers' Pension
Plan each control a 20-percent stake.
Political stance
Even
before the Globe merged with the Mail and Empire,
the paper was widely considered the voice of the Upper Canada elite—that is, the Bay Street
financial community of Toronto and the
intellectuals of university and government institutions. The
merger of the
Liberal
Globe and the
Tory Mail and
Empire prefigured the paper's characteristically
Red Tory editorial stance, as its support
alternated between the two established national parties. In the
past century, the paper has consistently endorsed either the
Liberal Party or the now-defunct
Progressive
Conservative Party of Canada in every federal election. The
paper had endorsed a
third
party on two occasions at the provincial level: it endorsed the
social-democratic
New Democratic
Party in the 1991
Saskatchewan provincial
election and
British Columbia
provincial election. The New Democrats won both elections and
went on to form provincial governments.
While the paper was known as a generally conservative voice of the
business establishment in the postwar decades, historian David
Hayes, in a review of its positions, has noted that the Globe's
editorials in this period "took a benign view of hippies and
homosexuals; championed most aspects of the welfare state; opposed,
after some deliberation, the Vietnam War; and supported legalizing
marijuana." It was a 1967
Globe and Mail editorial that
coined the phrase "The State has no place in the bedrooms of the
nation," in defence of legalization of homosexuality. The line was
later picked up by future Prime Minister
Pierre Trudeau to become one of his most
famous slogans.
Under the editorship of William Thorsell in the 1980s and 1990s,
the paper strongly endorsed the
free trade policies of
Progressive Conservative Prime Minister
Brian Mulroney. The paper also became an
outspoken proponent of the
Meech Lake
Accord and the
Charlottetown
Accord, with their editorial the day of the
1995 Quebec Referendum mostly quoting
a Mulroney speech in favour of the Accord. During this period, the
paper continued to favour such socially liberal policies as
decriminalizing drugs (including cocaine, whose legalization was
advocated most recently in a 1995 editorial) and expanding gay
rights.
In the 1990s and early 2000s, the paper generally supported the
policies of Liberal Prime Ministers
Jean Chrétien and
Paul Martin. In the
2006 federal election, the
paper turned away from the Liberals to
Stephen Harper's
Conservative Party of Canada.
Once again, in the
2008
federal election, the paper's editorial board endorsed the
Conservatives.
The paper's business section is bannered as
Report on Business.
Recent developments
In recent years, the paper has made changes to its format and
layout, such as the introduction of colour photographs, a separate
tabloid book-review section and the creation of the Review section
on arts, entertainment and culture. Although the paper is sold
throughout Canada and has long called itself "Canada's National
Newspaper",
The Globe and Mail also serves as a Toronto
metropolitan paper, publishing several special sections in its
Toronto edition that are not included in the national edition. As a
result, it is sometimes ridiculed for being too focused on the
Greater Toronto Area, part of a
wider humorous portrayal of Torontonians being blind to the greater
concerns of the nation. (A reverse criticism is sometimes applied
to
The New York Times,
with regards to its shrinking New York coverage in relation to its
US coverage). Critics sometimes refer to the paper as the
Toronto Globe and Mail or
Toronto's National
Newspaper. Recently, in an effort to gain market share in
Vancouver,
The Globe and Mail began publishing a distinct
west-coast edition, edited independently in Vancouver, containing a
three-page section of British Columbia news.
Other satirical nicknames for the paper include
Mop and
Pail or
Grope and Flail, both of which were coined by
longtime
Globe and Mail humour columnist
Richard J. Needham.
The University of
British Columbia
's student paper, The
Ubyssey published a parody issue titled Glib and
Male. The spring 2008 issue of the
Ryerson Review of
Journalism referenced the nickname "Old and Male" for the
paper's employee base and perceived target audience.
Since the launch of the
National
Post as another English-language national paper in 1998,
some industry analysts have proclaimed a "national newspaper war"
between
The Globe and Mail and the
National Post.
Thus far, however,
The Globe and Mail has continued to
outsell the
National Post.
On April 23, 2007, the paper introduced significant changes to its
print design and also introduced a new unified navigation system to
its websites. The paper added a "lifestyle" section to the
Monday-Friday editions, entitled
Globe Life, which has
been described as an attempt to attract readers from the rival
Toronto Star. Additionally,
the paper followed other North American papers by dropping detailed
stock listings in print and by shrinking the printed paper to a
12-inch width.
During the
2010 Winter
Olympics,
The Globe and Mail will publish special
Sunday editions in the British Columbia region, making it the first
time that the paper has ever published Sunday editions.
Key people
Senior editors
- David Walmsley, managing
editor
- Neil A.
Campbell,
executive editor
- John Stackhouse,
editor-in-chief
- Colin MacKenzie, comment
editor
- Tom Maloney, sports editor
- Andrew Gorham, arts editor
- Stephen Northfield, foreign
editor
- Sinclair Stewart, national
editor
- Sylvia Stead, deputy editor
- John Geiger,
editorial board editor
- Jill Borra, managing editor,
features
Foreign bureaus
- North America
- Europe
- Middle East, Asia and Africa
Staff columnists
Web columnists
References
- National Audience Databank Survey.
- Encyclopedia Britannica entry
- Globe and Mail, Oct. 30th, A12
- The next generation of The Globe
External links