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This is a list of newspapers in Venezuela, both national and regional. It also includes newspapers with other languages and themes. It also includes newspapers with other languages and themes. National
It granted two-year visas to 500,000 people from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua and Venezuela – all countries deemed by the United States to have unstable or repressive governments – if they had a U.S ...
U.S. President Donald Trump's envoy Richard Grenell will meet with Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro on Friday in Venezuela, both countries said, amid a deportation and anti-gang push by the ...
La Patilla (English: The Watermelon) is a Venezuelan news website that was founded by Alberto Federico Ravell, co-founder and former CEO of Globovisión, in 2010. [2] [3] In 2014, El Nuevo Herald stated La Patilla had hundreds of thousands of visitors per daily. [4]
Últimas Noticias is a tabloid newspaper in Venezuela founded in 1941 after pro-freedom measures implemented by President Isaías Medina Angarita and was the largest circulated newspaper in Venezuela prior to 2014. [3] Le Monde [4] and Reuters [5] described it in 2024 as a "pro-government" newspaper.
El Nacional is a Venezuelan publishing company under the name C.A. Editorial El Nacional, most widely known for its El Nacional newspaper and website. It, along with Últimas Noticias and El Universal, are the most widely read and circulated daily national newspapers in the country.
Última Hora (Spanish for "Last Hour") may refer to several newspapers: Última Hora, 1929–2001; Última Hora, 1951–1971; Última Hora (Nuevo Laredo), Tamaulipas, Mexico, founded in 1996; Última Hora, founded in 1973; Última Hora, in the Balearic Islands, founded in 1893; Última Hora, a newspaper in Venezuela
Caracas Chronicles is a group blog focused on Venezuelan news and analysis in English with a focus on Venezuelan politics and economics in the Chávez and post-Chávez era. . The website once described itself as "opposition-leaning-but-not-insane," [1] and, according to an Associated Press article, though highly critical of Venezuela's socialist government, the site "doesn't spare the oppositio