To understand what it must mean for Christoph Schwennicke to part with Cicero, it helps to know a few stories from the past of the debate magazine.
Cicero was still owned by Ringier when Schwennicke had the offer to switch to Madsack’s editorial network Germany a few years ago. Schwennicke canceled at the time, because he had a suspicion that if he stopped working as editor-in-chief of the debate magazine, the publisher Michael Ringier, who was financially under pressure from his sisters, could pull the ripcord at Cicero.
Later, Cicero and the art magazine Monopol, also published by Ringier, were to go to Axel Springer.
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