On 8 February 2010, the Hagemann publishing family and Publigroupe(A marketing group for media and publicity companies situated in Lausanne) announced the sale of their shares in Basler Zeitung Medien to investors
Tito Tettamanti and Martin Wagner. At the end of September 2010, the media group's holding company moved its registered office from
Basel to
Zug, where it was renamed "Watt Capital Holding AG". It is domiciled in the office of the Zug lawyer Ernst Brandenberg, whose son Manuel Brandenberg, who works there, is a leading Zug
SVP politician and a member of the board of directors of the SVP- and
AUNS-affiliated newspaper "Schweizerzeit". On 14 November 2010, it became known that the owners of the Basler Zeitung media group had given a consultancy mandate to the
management consultancy and financing company "Robinvest AG", whose board of directors consists of
Christoph Blocher and his daughter Rahel Blocher. Blocher was providing purely industrial consulting services through "Robinvest AG" and was not influencing newspaper content. After Blocher's consulting mandate became known, 1600 subscriptions were cancelled. The editorial staff also rebelled. There were protests. On 24 November 2010, it became known that the owners Tettamanti/Wagner had sold the "Basler Zeitung Medien" with immediate effect and 100 percent to the Basel entrepreneur and
Crossair founder Moritz Suter. Suter became chairman of the board of directors. He subsequently terminated Christoph Blocher's consultancy mandate. The holding company's headquarters were moved back from Zug to Basel. Markus Somm was confirmed as editor-in-chief. Moritz Suter announced in an interview in the NZZ am Sonntag that he had spent only about one million francs on the purchase of the holding company. The investors who now owned the "Basler Nachrichten und National Zeitung AG" (Basler Zeitung Medien), which had considerably more substance, remained unknown. Markus Somm hired new editors, such as Eugen Sorg from the weekly magazine Die
Weltwoche. On 21 February 2011, Basler Zeitung announced the dismissal of six journalists, the majority of whom were progressive critics. The complaints of the Association for Critical Media Use (February 2011), the initiative "Rettet Basel!" (meaning: save basel!) (March 2011) and by a Basler Zeitung journalist (May 2011) to the Swiss Press Council regarding the paper's opaque financing were upheld on 13 July 2011: The economic control of the newspaper by Moritz Suter was officially challenged by the Swiss Press Council and a corresponding disclosure was demanded. On 14 April 2011, the "Foundation for Media Diversity" was founded in response to the events at Basler Zeitung. Its goal is to set up a competing product to the Basler Zeitung. The new newspaper, called
TagesWoche, appeared for the first time on 28 October 2011. On 12 December 2011, Moritz Suter ceded his shares to Rahel Blocher, thus ending his attempt to reorganize Basler Zeitung. He stepped down as chairman of the board of directors as well as publisher. Media saw the sale to Christoph Blocher's daughter Rahel as proof that Basler Zeitung had been controlled by Christoph Blocher for some time, despite his denials in the past. However, as early as 14 December 2011, Basler Zeitung was taken over by the newly founded "Media diversity Holding" based in the canton of
Zug. The Ticino financier Tito Tettamanti again became the majority shareholder. National Councilor Filippo Leutenegger became the new president of the Basler Zeitung. The commitment of Rahel and Christoph Blocher changed to a deficit guarantee provided by Christoph Blocher to the industrial divisions of the Basel media group. However, media critical of BaZ and the "Rettet Basel!" which means "save Basel" campaign, also critical of BaZ, continued to assume a strong influence of Blocher and SVP confidants. "Media diversity Holding" is not to be confused with the "foundation for Media diversity" the supporting foundation of TagesWoche, which competes with BaZ. According to Tito Tettamanti, the choice of name is purely coincidental. == Restructuring and reorientation in 2014 ==