Watching The Observer
As Tortoise's bid to buy The Observer slowly inches forward and the newspaper's staff go out on strike, what's going to happen next?
Previously: Cracking a Bad Gregg?
Why does it take so long for complaints about stars to be publicised? Because the legal bar is so high and the BBC still protects 'talent'.
Today is The Observer’s 233rd birthday, but instead of celebrating, staff at the world’s oldest Sunday newspaper and colleagues from its sister title, The Guardian, are staging their first strike in 50 years. The catalyst for the 48-hour walkout is the proposed takeover of The Observer by Tortoise, the slow-news startup founded by former Times editor and ex-head of BBC News, James Harding.
News of Tortoise’s plan to pick up The Observer emerged in September when the Scott Trust announced that it had begun formal negotiations over a sale. In October, National Union of Journalists (NUJ) members passed a motion saying the plan would be a “betrayal” of the Scott Trust’s commitment to The Observer. Staff opposed to the proposal are concerned that Tortoise is loss-making, proposes a minimal investment (£25 million over five years), and appears to be the only bidder being seriously considered.
Last week, Dale Vince, the founder of green energy supplier Ecotricity, expressed interest in acquiring The Observer but Guardian Media Group said it had received no bids “containing any substantive detail” other than Tortoise’s proposal.
Five former editors and one former editor-in-chief of The Observer have urged the Scott Trust to pause the sale. Paul Webster, who departed as Observer editor in November, joined fellow former Observer editors Roger Alton, John Mulholland, Will Hutton, and Jonathan Fenby in signing a letter protesting the new ownership plan. They were joined by former Guardian and Observer editor-in-chief Alan Rusbridger. That ad-hoc editorial board starkly laid out the disparity between Tortoise’s financial performance and The Observer’s position:
We are concerned to read of the widespread disquiet among Guardian and Observer journalists over the proposal essentially to give the paper to Tortoise Media, an enterprising but small start-up led by James Harding. We admire James and the work Tortoise has done, especially in podcasting, but note that his company has never, in six years, made a profit. Its last set of accounts show an operating loss of £4.5m on a turnover of £6.2m.
The Scott Trust's own figures show that the Observer made a net contribution of £3.4m in 2024 and that, in the first six months of the current financial year, it was contributing £1.8m. We fully understand the figures do not include certain shared costs with the Guardian and that newspaper sales are declining across the market. Nevertheless, we see no crisis that could possibly justify a rushed sale.
The ex-editors argue that there should be further discussions about a future for the Observer under its present ownership and that only if those fail should there be a three-month period seeking competing offers for the title. Tortoise has lost more than £16m since it launched in 2019.
The problem putting aside “certain shared costs with the Guardian” is that skates over major financial issues for The Observer. Guardian Media Group argues that the Sunday paper is loss-making when you take them into account. But it’s also an problem for the Tortoise bid. After almost 32 years under The Scott Trust’s ownership — it purchased The Observer to prevent it from being snapped up by The Independent and subsumed into The Independent on Sunday — The Observer doesn’t truly exist as a separate entity.
While The Observer has a distinct editorial team, its digital presence is intrinsically linked to The Guardian. You have to look very carefully to notice that a news story or feature came from The Observer when you’re reading online. In print, The Guardian and The Observer stopped making their ABC circulation figures public in 2021, which makes it hard to quantify the Sunday title’s contribution. Press Gazette estimates that The Observer’s average print readership is somewhere around 80,000 a week. If it’s right, that makes it hard to argue for a separate newsroom.
Harding presented his ‘vision’ for the future of The Observer to staff at the paper last month. He suggested he wants to launch a paywalled website and keep the print newspaper alive, investing in new business and sports departments. The plan to build a healthy subscription model for the paper would be an attempt to emulate The Atlantic in the US and The Spectator in the UK. While Tortoise has long been loss-making, it forecasts that it will make a profit in 2025 and Harding claims he could make The Observer profitable by 2029.
Harding told The Sunday Times that the Observer bid was not an attempt to secure more investment for Tortoise but that “the reason for doing it… is seeing [the title] fade away, and thinking, ‘Actually, we can really turn it around.’” On the opposite side of the argument, Observer writer Carole Cadwalladr called the bid “an existential threat to our journalism”.
The reality of the Tortoise plan is this: It’s not promising nearly enough money to successfully separate The Observer from The Guardian and build it up as a stand-alone product. £25m will evaporate like early morning dew. To unpick its reliance on The Guardian, the new Observer would be more like £100m to even get started as a true competitor. However, the actual conditions of the sale to Tortoise look to be even more complicated.
Scott Trust chair Ole Jacob Sunde has written a letter to staff in which he makes new promises about the future of The Observer. In it, he writes:
Throughout the process out goal has always been to do what is right for Guardian and Observer readers and staff so that both titles continue to promote liberal journalism and thrive long into the future. This has been at the forefront of our discussions as a board.
With this in mind, any decision we make will have to meet the following criteria:
The Scott Trust to stay on as a part-owner of the Observer
The Observer to have secure and sustainable, long-term funding
Other owners of the title to take a long-term view of their investment
All owners to embody the values of editorial independence, press freedoms and liberal journalism that have been part of the Observer’s ethos since we bought it in 1993
The Observer to be governed by a mature board structure, with a role for the Scott Trust on the Tortoise Media editorial and commercial boards.
The Scott Trust also says there will be a time-limited voluntary redundancy scheme for staff who don’t want to transfer to Tortoise Media and those that do will also be able to apply for ‘internal only’ open roles at The Guardian for a period.
Having the Scott Trust remain as a part-owner of The Observer would be in the interests of Tortoise because it would almost certainly lead to a non-aggression pact preventing The Guardian switching to a seven-day operation or turning its Saturday edition into a bulked-up competitor to the FT Weekend.
While I hope the strike action is successful, it seems likely that the Tortoise deal will be pushed through. I don’t believe Harding’s claim that he can make The Observer into a subscription-based success. Decoupled from The Guardian, the paper will be a zombie brand, disconnected from any remaining readership loyalty. While the title is already a declining print prospect, Tortoise taking over will hasten that. I’d like to be proved wrong, but I suspect I won’t be.
Thanks for reading.
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No-one (apart from Murdoch) ever bought a newspaper to get rich. They do it for self-aggrandisement and for political influence - for good or evil. Usually the latter - eg the Hearst newspapers in America and the Rothermere press in UK, both rabid supporters of European fascism in the 20s, 30s and beyond. The Scott Trust has vast assets (£1.4bn) and has no need whatever to sell the Observer for a few million. The whole daft plot should be dumped.