El País
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Type | Daily newspaper |
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Format | Tabloid |
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Owner | Grupo PRISA |
Publisher | Jesús de Polanco |
Editor | Javier Moreno |
Founded | May 4, 1976 |
Political allegiance | Social-Democrat |
Language | Spanish |
Price | €1 daily |
Headquarters | Miguel Yuste 40, 28037 Madrid Spain |
Circulation | 432,204 daily in 2006[1] |
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Website: www.elpais.com |
El País (Spanish for "The Country") is the most widely-circulated daily newspaper in Spain. According to the 2005 Estudio General de Medios (General Media Study), it has about 2.1 million readers; El Mundo ("The World") is second with an estimated 1.29 million readers.[1] El País is often referred to as a newspaper of record from Spain, along with its fellow Madrid morning dailies El Mundo and ABC. Politically and ideologically it is connected with social democrats.
It was first published on May 4, 1976, during the early stages of the Spanish transition to democracy. Founder José Ortega Spottorno based it on the model of France's Le Monde. It is now part of the media conglomerate Grupo Prisa [2].
On September 26, 2007 the paper published the Bush-Aznar memo, a leaked transcript of a closed-door meeting between presidents Bush and Aznar shortly before the invasion of Iraq [3].
[edit] Notable contributors
- Ariel Dorfman
- Juan Carlos Gumucio
- Elvira Lindo
- Mario Vargas Llosa
- Javier Marías
- Rosa Montero
- Manuel Rivas
- Eduardo Mendoza
- Empar Moliner
- Maruja Torres
- Eduardo Haro Tecglen
- Pilar Rahola
[edit] References
- ^ a b Figures covering January to December 2006 from Oficina de Justificación de la Difusión, accessed April 26, 2007.
- ^ "El País 30 Aniversario"
- ^ "El País on Bush, Aznar, and Iraq". Harper's Magazine
[edit] External links
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