- La Nación is simultaneously a liberal and conservative newspaper ... and we feel good in that place. "[citation needed]. Judge Julián Ercolini acquitted him in 2016, pointing that there was no evidence to support the claim. In a fierce defense of the military government, a day to day, in 12 March 1990, the newspaper changed to a center-left line. It is the second most read newspaper in print, behind Clarín, and the third in digital format, behind Infobae and Clarín. After that, its rightful owner, Eliodoro Yanez, left Chile, remaining in exile until 1931. Government endorsed newspaper of the Concertación, Learn how and when to remove these template messages, Learn how and when to remove this template message, Official Journal of the Republic of Chile, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=La_Nación_(Chile)&oldid=968006912, Online newspapers with defunct print editions, Short description with empty Wikidata description, Articles needing additional references from October 2010, All articles needing additional references, Articles lacking in-text citations from October 2010, Wikipedia articles in need of updating from September 2013, All Wikipedia articles in need of updating, Articles with multiple maintenance issues, Articles with unsourced statements from September 2011, Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License, This page was last edited on 16 July 2020, at 17:04.
[18], Until the death of its owner, it ideologically supported the national liberalism and the National Civic Union.[19][20]. On October 30, 2016, La Nación announced a change in its printing format, with weekday editions now being printed as tabloids and weekend editions retaining the traditional broadsheet format. [9], The director of La Nación, Bartolomé Mitre (the founder's great-great-grandson), shares control of ADEPA, the Argentine newspaper industry trade group, and of Papel Prensa, the nation's leading newsprint manufacturer, with Grupo Clarín. Its motto is: "La Nación will be a tribune of doctrine." Until today the Chilean State has not assumed debt to the descendants of Eliodoro Yáñez, as regards the daily La Nación. La Nación was born as a partisan newspaper, to sustain the political action of Bartolomé Mitre, former President of Argentina. The newspaper La Nacion was created in 1917 as a way to deliver information and compete with other newspapers of Santiago (El Mercurio, Las Ultimas Noticias, El Diario Ilustrado, among others). [14][15] SimilarWeb rates the site as the 4th most visited news website in Argentina, attracting almost 32 million visitors per month.[15][16]. At present, the results of the University Selection Test (PSU, which replaced the PAA) are published by El Mercurio, those in SIMCE by La Tercera, and the housing subsidy by La Cuarta.
During the 1990s, the nation will achieve sales soaring at times, especially when it published the results of the Scholastic Aptitude Test (PAA), the SIMCE, or housing subsidies. Hasta 1914, el editor gerente fue José Luis Murature , Ministro de Relaciones Exteriores de Argentina de 1914-1916. [8] The publishing group today is headquartered in the Bouchard Plaza Tower, a 26-storey Post-modern office building developed between 2000 and 2004 over the news daily's existing, six-storey building. Since then, the newspaper consolidated a trend conservative-liberal,[21] being critical of the radical and peronist governments. As the country's leading conservative[5] paper, La Nación's main competitor is the centrist Clarín. During the 1980s, La Nación became the official means the government of Augusto Pinochet, on several occasions including various writings and publications of a propaganda.