Le Miroir

Le Miroir (: 'The Mirror') is a Redonian daily afternoon. It is the main publication of Groupe Le Miroir and reported an average circulation of 323,039 copies per issue in 2009, about 40,000 of which were sold abroad. It has had its own website since 6 December 1995, and is often the only Redonian print newspaper easily obtainable in non-Redonian-speaking countries. It is considered one of the Redonian, along with Révolution, and La Tour.

The newspaper was founded in 1967 by graduate students of the University of Senon. It was propelled to nationwide relevance by the 1972 Student Protests, which were in part sparked due to the attempted shutdown of the paper by the Redonian government. The Mirror represented the liberal left of the Redonian political spectrum for most of its early years, but began to move towards the center in the later 70s. Under editor Pierre Vaillancourt (1999 - present) it has come to be known as a fully liberal paper, especially after its support of a referendum on the Treaty of Ostarna in 2002.

71% of the newspaper is owned by Groupe Le Miroir, a cooperative of which all the papers' employees are members. The remaining 39% stake in the paper is split between the Groupe Tiercelin (35%) and Avon Media (4%). Senior decisions are made by a 25-member Administrative Board, appointed by stakeholders (the corporate authorities of Avon and Groupe Tiercelin, and the elected Managing Council of Groupe Le Miroir).