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El Porvenir [23] [1] Monterrey, Nuevo León [6] La Prensa [1] Mexico City [3] La Prensa (Tamaulipas) [8] Tamaulipas La Prensa Sonora [2] Hermosillo, Sonora [2] Primera Hora: Nuevo Laredo, Tamaulipas Primera Plana [2] Hermosillo, Sonora [2] Público [citation needed] Guadalajara, Jalisco Pulso: San Luis Potosí [6] Realidades: Tepic, Nayarit ...
La Prensa de Colorado: Colorado: Denver: 2010 La Prensa de Minnesota: Minnesota Minneapolis El Puente Indiana [9] Goshen Que Pasa: North Carolina Charlotte 2002 La Raza: Illinois Chicago 1970 www.laraza.com: Rumbo: Massachusetts Lawrence 1996 Rumbo: Texas San Antonio, Houston, Austin, McAllen 2004 (no longer in print) El Sentinel: Florida Orlando
Below is a list of general-interest daily newspapers published in Spain with circulations of over 5,000, according to data from the Spanish Oficina de Justificación de la Difusión for the period January to December 2013.
El Diario Nueva York is the largest [2] and the oldest Spanish-language daily newspaper in the United States. Published by ImpreMedia, the paper covers local, national and international news with an emphasis on Latin America, as well as human-interest stories, politics, business and technology, health, entertainment, and sports.
Alongside his daughter María Ramírez Fernández, he founded El Español. [6] [7] The website was opened on 11 January 2015. [8] On 10 January 2015, it raised € 3,600,000 from 5,624 people in two months through crowdfunding. [9] On 10 April 2015, it became a Sociedad Anónima, [10] with a share capital of €17 million. [11]
La Hora [6] El Metropolitano, based in Mixco; published twice each month [7] Nuestro Diario, the most widely circulated newspaper in Central America [8] El Periódico [9] Publinews, the first free daily in Guatemala [10] El Quetzalteco, based in Quetzaltenango; digital only and part of Prensa Libre [11] [12] El Siglo [13] Siglo Veintiuno [14]
ABC is known for generally supporting conservative political views, [13] and defending the Spanish monarchy. [14] The paper has also a right-wing stance. [15] Its director since 1983, Luis María Ansón, left the paper in 1997; [9] he founded another daily, La Razón, which initially catered to even more conservative readers.
La Prensa is a Mexican newspaper, owned by Organizacion Editorial Mexicana, established in 1928. The newspaper had a circulation of 244,299, [1] the highest circulation of any newspaper in Mexico, as of 2013. Their sister newspaper, ESTO once had the highest circulation of any Mexican newspaper with 400,000 copies.