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Le Journal de Québec is a French-language daily newspaper in Quebec City, Quebec, Canada. Printed in tabloid format, it has the highest circulation for a Quebec City newspaper, with its closest competitor being Le Soleil. It was founded March 6, 1967, by Pierre Péladeau, founder of Quebecor.
Le Devoir (independent) Le Droit – produced in Ottawa, but also distributed in Gatineau and elsewhere in Outaouais; La Presse (independent) online-only since 2018; Le Soleil (Quebec) La Tribune (Sherbrooke) La Voix de l'Est (Granby) Le Nouvelliste (Trois-Rivières) Le Quotidien (Saguenay) Le Journal de Montréal
Le Canadien 1806, Quebec City, Pierre Bédard, François Blanchet and Jean-Thomas Taschereau; Courier de Québec, 1807, Quebec City, Pierre-Amable de Bonne and Joseph-François Perrault, founders, Pierre-Édouard Desbarats, printer, Jacques Labrie, editor; Canadian courant and Montreal Advertiser, 1807, Montréal, Nahum Mower, owner and editor
Le Soleil rose from the ashes of L'Électeur, the official newspaper of the Liberal Party of Canada, which shut down in December 1896.The first edition was published on December 28, 1896. one day after the disappearance of its predecessor, which shut down because the Catholic clergy had forbidden it to parishioners when the newspaper criticized the Church's electoral interference.
Le Journal de Montréal covers mostly local and provincial news, as well as sports, arts and justice. It is known for its sensationalist news, and its columnists who are often public figures. Since 2013 the newspaper also has an investigation desk that published several major news stories about Quebec's politics, businesses, crime and national ...
TVA Nouvelles is the news division of TVA, a French language television network in Canada.. Programs produced by the division include nightly local and national newscasts branded as TVA Nouvelles, as well as the news magazine program JE.
The city's main daily newspaper is Le Quotidien. Le Journal de Québec also publishes a special edition for the Saguenay–Lac-Saint-Jean region. [1] [2] Other newspapers now or formerly published in the city include Le Réveil, as well as student newspapers published at the city's colleges and at the Université du Québec à Chicoutimi.
He notably compared some Quebec nationalist writers in the newspaper Le Devoir in the 1930s to Nazi propagandists in Der Stürmer [55] and criticized the Quebec politician René Lévesque before an American audience. [56] Richler also criticized Israel [57] and was known as something of a "curmudgeon" in literary circles. [58]