Circulation In 2022, a TGI survey found that
Haaretz was the newspaper with the third largest
readership in Israel, with an exposure rate of 4.7%, below
Israel Hayom's rate of 31% and 's 23.9%. Apart from the news,
Haaretz publishes feature articles on social and environmental issues, as well as book reviews, investigative reporting, and political commentary. In 2008, the newspaper itself reported a paid subscribership of 65,000, daily sales of 72,000 copies, and 100,000 on weekends.
Readership and reception Despite its historically relatively low circulation in Israel,
Haaretz has for many years been described as Israel's most influential daily newspaper. In 2006, it exposed a scandal regarding professional and ethical standards at Israeli hospitals. Its readership includes members of Israel's intelligentsia and members of its political and economic elites. In 1999, surveys showed that
Haaretz readership had above-average education, income, and wealth, and that most were
Ashkenazi Jews. Some have said that
Haaretz functions in Israel much as
The New York Times does in the United States, as a
newspaper of record. In 2007,
Shmuel Rosner,
Haaretz's former U.S. correspondent, told
The Nation, "people who read it are better educated and more sophisticated than most, but the rest of the country doesn't know it exists."
Andrea Levin, executive director of the pro-Israel
Committee for Accuracy in Middle East Reporting in America (CAMERA), said
Haaretz was doing "damage to the truth" and sometimes making serious factual errors without correcting them. According to
The Jerusalem Post,
Haaretz editor-in-chief
David Landau said at the 2007
Limmud conference in Moscow that he had told his staff not to report on criminal investigations against Prime Minister
Ariel Sharon in order to promote Sharon's 2004–2005
Gaza disengagement plan. In April 2017,
Haaretz published an op-ed by a staff writer that said the Israeli religious right was worse than
Hezbollah. Condemnation followed, including from Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu, President
Reuven Rivlin, and other government ministers and
MPs, as well as from Opposition Leader
Isaac Herzog. On 31 October 2024,
Haaretz publisher
Amos Schocken made remarks during a speech at a
Haaretz conference in London, criticising the
Netanyahu government for allegedly imposing an
apartheid regime on the Palestinian population and referring to "Palestinian freedom fighters that Israel calls terrorists." In response, the Israeli
interior,
education,
diaspora ministries severed ties with
Haaretz while the
Communications Minister Shlomo Karhi advocated a boycott of the newspaper covering all government bodies and employees. Schocken distanced himself from parts of comments the next day, saying that "the use of terrorism is not legitimate". By 4 November, the newspaper had received hundreds of cancellation and subscription termination requests, and a decline in advertising revenue. Several ministries had requested to cancel their subscriptions, with the
Israeli foreign ministry cancelling 90 subscriptions. == Internet editions ==