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One of only two national left-wing papers (the other being elDiario.es), [4] [5] the paper had a harder-left editorial line than El País. [6] Público also aimed at a younger readership. [7] The paper was two-thirds the length of its competitors and its price, initially only 50 cents, was less than half. The paper's original press run was ...
El País was the first pro-democracy newspaper within a context where all the other Spanish newspapers were influenced by Franco's ideology. [16] The circulation of the paper was 116,600 copies in its first year. [17] It rose to 138,000 copies in 1977. [17] In 1978, El País suffered a far-right terrorist attack due to political upheaval. Four ...
elDiario.es publishes its contents under a CC BY-SA license. It contains two exceptions: first, the license does not apply to the content (text, graphics, information, images, and so forth) published by elDiario.es from third parties when assigned or attributed to news agencies (EFE, Europa Press, for instance) or any other company separate from Diario de Prensa Digital, SL.
In 2014, Pedro J. Ramírez was dismissed as the director from the newspaper El Mundo. [5] 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]
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] La Voz del ...
El Periódico is Spanish for "The Journal" and may refer to: El Periódico de Catalunya, a Spanish newspaper; El Periódico de Aragón, a Spanish newspaper;
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.
[3] [4] Its sister newspapers are El Mundo and Marca. [4] [5] Expansión used to be part of the British group Pearson, [6] which had a share of 39% in the paper during the late 1990s. [7] During this period, the publisher was Ârea Editorial. [2] The headquarters of Expansión is in Madrid.