Alan Rusbridger

Alan Rusbridger

Alan Rusbridger at the International Journalism Festival 2014
Born Alan Charles Rusbridger
29 December 1953[1]
Northern Rhodesia (present-day Zambia)
Alma mater Magdalene College, Cambridge
Occupation Editor
Notable credit(s) Editor of The Guardian
Salary £395,000[2]
Spouse(s) Lindsay Mackie[2]
Children 2 daughters
Website
twitter.com/arusbridger

Alan Charles Rusbridger (born 29 December 1953) is a British journalist and the editor-in chief of The Guardian. He took up the post in 1995, having been a reporter and columnist earlier in his career. Rusbridger will be succeeded in his post by Katharine Viner in the summer of 2015.[3]

Life and career

Before 1995

Rusbridger was born in Lusaka,[2] Northern Rhodesia, a protectorate (now Zambia), the son of B.E. (née Wickham) and G.H. Rusbridger, the Director of Education of Northern Rhodesia. When Rusbridger was five, the family returned to Britain[2] and he was educated at Lanesborough Prep School, Guildford, where he was also a chorister at Christ Church, and Cranleigh School, a boys' independent school in Cranleigh, Surrey. At Magdalene College, Cambridge, he read English Literature. During the vacations of his first two years at university, he worked for the Cambridge Evening News as an intern, and accepted a job offer from the newspaper after graduation. He stayed with the Evening News until 1979.[2]

He then joined The Guardian as a reporter, and subsequently wrote the paper's diary column and later became a feature writer. In November 1985, Rusbridger had a brief stint as a Royal reporter following the Prince and Princess of Wales around Melbourne, Australia. Fascinated by gadgets, at this stage he was already using a Tandy word processor and an early (slow) modem to file stories back to London.[4] He left in 1986 to become TV critic of The Observer, then an entirely separate newspaper, before moving to America to be the Washington editor of the short-lived London Daily News in 1987.

After returning to The Guardian, he launched the "Weekend" supplement in 1988, followed by the paper's "G2" section. He became features editor in 1994.[5]

After 1995

Rusbridger was appointed as the editor of The Guardian by the Scott Trust in late January 1995 after a decisive vote of the National Union of Journalists chapel, management and trustees in an electoral college.[6] As editor he defended the paper against a number of high-profile defamation suits, including those from the Police Federation and the Conservative MPs, Neil Hamilton and Jonathan Aitken. In the case involving Hamilton, and the lobbyist Ian Greer, he said: "They weren’t going to fight us in the court so they tried to do it through the TV studio." Rusbridger countered them by being available for TV interviews over three days to ensure that their version of events did not gain precedence.[5] Hamilton's case collapsed shortly before a court hearing, while Aitken was demonstrated to have perjured himself, and served a prison sentence as a result.[7]

Seen early in his editorship as a modernising new broom, he commented in June 1997 shortly after the election of Tony Blair's first New Labour government that the "old" Guardian: "opposed lots of things the Tories did which we'd now think weren't terribly bad in retrospect ... I mean, a lot of the trade union stuff doesn't seem as horrendous now as it seemed at the time."[8] From around 1997, he oversaw the launch and development of the newspaper's website,[9] initially known as Guardian Unlimited.

In September 2005 The Guardian responded to the tabloid re-launches of The Times and The Independent by moving from a broadsheet format to the "Berliner" format, which is common in the rest of Europe. The print edition of the newspaper still accounted for about 75% of the company's revenue around 2012. In a profile of Rusbridger though, published in the New Statesman at the end of May 2012, former newspaper editor Peter Wilby cast doubt on whether Rusbridger's enthusiasm for online journalism, freely available without a paywall, and the large amount of money invested by the group, would ever gain a return or ensure the long-term survival of the newspaper.[9]

He is a member of the board of Guardian News and Media, of the main board of the Guardian Media Group and of the Scott Trust, which owns The Guardian and The Observer, of which he is executive editor. Rusbridger received £471,000 in pay and benefits in 2008/9,[10] but has since volunteered to a series of pay cuts, bringing his revenue to £395,000 in fiscal year 2012.[2]

He has written three children's books, as well as being the co-author (with Ronan Bennett) of a BBC drama, Fields of Gold.

In December 2014, Rusbridger announced he will step down as editor of The Guardian in the summer of 2015.[11] He will succeed Dame Liz Forgan as chair of the Scott Trust in 2016.[12][13] On 20 March 2015, The Guardian announced Katharine Viner as Rusbridger's successor.[3]

Publication of Wikileaks and Edward Snowden material

As editor-in-chief, in August 2013 Rusbridger took the decision to destroy hard drives containing information leaked to The Guardian by Edward Snowden, rather than comply with a government demand to hand over the data. An alternative action was agreed and in the presence of the authorities the drives were destroyed, Rusbridger described performing the task as "slightly pointless". "Given that there were other copies, I saw no reason not to destroy this material ourselves."[14]

On 3 December 2013 Rusbridger gave evidence before a Home Affairs Select Committee hearing on counterterrorism at the UK Parliament with regard to the publication of information leaked by Snowden.[15]

In the film The Fifth Estate (2013), about The Guardian '​s former association with the Wikileaks founder Julian Assange, Rusbridger was portrayed by Peter Capaldi.[16]

Other activities

He is visiting Fellow of Nuffield College, Oxford, and Visiting Professor of History at Queen Mary, University of London. Between 2004 and 2013 he was Chair of the National Youth Orchestra of Great Britain.[17] He is a governor of the Ditchley Foundation,[18] an organisation which exists to promote international relations, and 10:10, a British climate change campaign for a 10% reduction in carbon emissions in 2010.

A week after it was announced that Rusbridger is stepping down as editor of The Guardian, it was announced on 17 December 2014 that he had been elected the next Principal of Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford, a constituent college of Oxford University.[19]

He is an amateur pianist and recently performed Chopin's Ballade No. 1 for More4 in "Rusbridger vs Chopin", and speaks about the difficulties of taking on a piece considered by many professional pianists as daunting.[20]

Personal life and honours

In 1982, he married the educationalist Lindsay Mackie. She helped found FILMCLUB. They have two daughters (born 1983 and May 1986), one of whom, Bella Mackie writes for The Guardian, using her mother's surname to avoid suspicion of having obtained the job through nepotism.[21]

Rusbridger received an Honorary Doctorate of Letters from the University of Lincoln in September 2009,[22] from the University of Kingston in January 2010[23] and from the University of Oslo in September 2014.[24]

In 2010 he was chosen to deliver the annual Andrew Olle Media Lecture in Australia.

He was one of the 2014 recipients of the Right Livelihood Award.

Bibliography

References

  1. "RUSBRIDGER, Alan Charles". Who's Who 2013, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 2013; online edn, Oxford University Press.(subscription required)
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 Ken Auletta "Annals of Communications: Freedom of Information", The New Yorker, 7 October 2013
  3. 3.0 3.1 "Guardian appoints Katharine Viner as editor-in-chief". The Guardian. 20 March 2015. Retrieved 22 March 29015. Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  4. Alan Rusbridger "Alan Rusbridger – Editor, The Guardian", Press Gazette, 23 November 2005.
  5. 5.0 5.1 Stephen Armstrong "MEDIA: PROFILE; Guardian of journalistic integrity: Alan Rusbridger, Editor, the Guardian", PR Week, 11 October 1996.
  6. Maggie Brown "Guardian names its new editor", The Independent, 25 January 1995
  7. Alan Rusbridger "The long, slow road to libel reform", guardian.co.uk, 10 May 2011.
  8. Rob Brown "New Government! New Guardian! Alan Rusbridger is shaking up his staff with Blairite conviction", The Independent, 2 June 1997.
  9. 9.0 9.1 Peter Wilby "Alan Rusbridger: the quiet evangelist", New Statesman, 30 May 2012.
  10. Guardian profile.
  11. "Alan Rusbridger to step down as Guardian editor-in-chief". BBC News. 10 December 2014.
  12. "Guardian editor Alan Rusbridger to step down next summer", telegraph.co.uk, 10 December 2014
  13. Media Mole "Alan Rusbridger stepping down as Guardian editor-in-chief", New Statesman website, 10 December 2014
  14. "Rusbridger: destroying hard drives allowed us to continue NSA coverage". The Guardian.
  15. Anthony Faiola, "Guardian editor defends publication of Snowden files", The Washington Post, 3 December 2012.
  16. The Fifth Estate at the Internet Movie Database
  17. "Dame Liz Forgan appointed as new NYO Chair", National Youth Orchestra of Great Britain.
  18. "The Governors". The Ditchley Foundation.
  19. "Mr Alan Rusbridger elected as the next Principal of Lady Margaret Hall". www.lmh.ox.ac.uk. Retrieved 17 December 2014.
  20. "Rusbridger vs Chopin", Radio Times.
  21. "Guardian editor's daughter in Melanie Phillips row". The Jewish Chronicle. Retrieved 22 April 2011.
  22. "Guardian chief editor honoured by university". The Linc. 23 September 2009. Retrieved 22 April 2011.
  23. "Good news comes by degrees". Kingston University. 21 January 2010. Retrieved 21 November 2011.
  24. Norsk Telegrambyrå (2 September 2014). "Hyller Snowden-lekkasjer". Retrieved 8 September 2014.

External links

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Preceded by
Jonathan Fenby
Deputy Editor of The Guardian
1993–1995
Succeeded by
Georgina Henry
Preceded by
Peter Preston
Editor of The Guardian
1995–present
Incumbent