48.01
Switched off
The media has been a political football in Argentina for years. Now, as Irene Caselli reports, people are losing confidence in local news and are looking for alternatives 48(01): 14/17 | DOI: 10.1177/0306422019842084
ARGENTINA'S ELECTION MACHINE is revving up ahead of the presidential election in October. But as journalists and media owners struggle, people are looking to other, less traditional outlets for their news.
And that is worrying commentators who blame the election in Brazil of the far-right populist president Jair Bolsonaro, in part on the influence of unreliable Whatsapp groups and “fake news” sites. They wonder whether there could be a similar rise in populism in Argentina where people are losing confidence in the established local media.
The crisis in journalism is acute. Newspapers and news agencies are closing, journalists are losing their jobs and people say they do not trust traditional news outlets any more.
Since Mauricio Macri took over as president of Argentina three years ago, more than 3,000 journalists have lost their jobs, according to the Forum of Argentine Journalism (Fopea).
El Gráfico, one of Latin America's most prestigious sport magazines, closed down in 2018 after 99 years on the market; the Englishlanguage daily Buenos Aires Herald disappeared after 140 years; and regional media laid off workers and contributors including at Río Negro, Patagonia's largest newspaper.
The private national news agency Diaros y Noticias (Dyn) closed in November 2017, and in June 2018 the state-run agency Telam laid off journalists and its overall output went down.
“Dyn was the only strong and independent agency in Argentina,” said Daniel Dessein, president of La Gaceta, the largest newspaper in north-western Argentina. “It reported on what happened in every province beyond Buenos Aires. Now, in terms of information, provinces have fewer channels to learn about what happens in the rest of the country. It is generating an insularity effect.” Martín Becerra, Argentina's leading media analyst, told Index that there were “broad consequences for freedom of expression” after these closures. “Society as a whole is affected by the decline of sources for local and regional information as well as professionally edited perspectives,” he said.
Dessein agrees: "Democracy is undoubtedly affected by the decline in the journalistic flow, quality and rigour and by the decline of diversity and plurality of voices. All this affects public debate.”
In response to this crisis other outlets are setting up shop. Chani Guyot worked for 20 years as an editor at La Nación, one of Argentina's largest newspapers. In 2017, he left his role as editor-in-chief and started Redacción, a digital enterprise dedicated to local stories.
Guyot views Redacción as an antidote to the media crisis: “We claim we are doing human journalism,” he said. The publication, which finances itself thanks to private donations and a membership model, focuses on social issues that are not covered by other media.
Redacción is part of a new landscape of digital media that create alternative coverage. Chequeado, Cosecha Roja, Revista Anfibia,
Society as a whole is affected by the decline of sources for local and regional information as well as professionally edited perspectives
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