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Spain's El Mundo editor steps down; Rajoy's administration denies any involvement

Monday, February 3rd 2014 - 19:54 UTC
Full article 3 comments
Ramirez founded the newspaper in 1989 and uncovered several political scandals both under the Socialist and Conservative governments Ramirez founded the newspaper in 1989 and uncovered several political scandals both under the Socialist and Conservative governments

The influential founding editor of Spain’s second-biggest newspaper, El Mundo, stepped down on Thursday after a decline in circulation and a series of revelations of alleged corruption in the ruling party.

 Pedro Jose Ramirez, known as Pedro J (pronounced “Hota”), has been sharply critical of Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy, even though El Mundo, part of the Italian RCS group, is considered broadly sympathetic to the ruling conservative People’s Party.

Ramirez, who often appears to court controversy, is known for breaking some of Spain’s biggest political scandals of the last 25 years, including uncovering death squads backed by the Socialist government in the 1990s and, more recently, allegations of PP corruption.

An insatiable tweeter, he wrote rambling two-page Sunday editorials peppered with historical and literary references taking on everything from the Catalan independence movement to Rajoy’s cautious leadership style.

“Editorship of El Mundo will be assigned to Casimiro Garcia-Abadillo, currently deputy editor, with the objective of re-launching its hard copy circulation and further strengthening its digital leadership,” RCS said in a statement.

Ramirez left with severance pay of about 15 million Euros, a source close to the matter told Reuters news agency. Local media reported that the newspaper had been losing millions of Euros a year, but RCS declined to comment.

The circulation of the paper and its on-line version ORBYT fell 14% in 2012, according to the last full-year report available from RCS.

The same source said Ramirez’s clash with the government was behind the decision.

But Economy Minister Luis de Guindos said the government had “absolutely not” been involved in the decision, and praised Ramirez as “a great journalist who has left his mark on an era in Spain”.

However a Milan media analyst, who asked not to be identified, said Ramirez’s payoff would make a significant dent in the figures of its owner Unidad Editorial, a unit of RCS, but that there could be benefits for the firm’s other media interests.

“Clashing with the government could be counterproductive on regulatory issues relating to TV spectrum or advertising,” he said

Ramirez, the partner of fashion designer Agatha Ruiz de la Prada, founded the newspaper in 1989. A colorful and outspoken figure, he likes to wear the old-style newspaper editor’s caricature braces.

He made his mark in the 1990s when El Mundo revealed that government-backed death squads had tortured and killed suspected members of the violent Basque separatist group ETA. The interior minister of the time eventually went to jail for his involvement.

But after almost 200 people were killed in train bombings in Madrid in 2004, Ramirez and El Mundo lost credibility by repeatedly asserting that it was unclear who was behind the attacks - giving fuel to ETA conspiracy theorists. Spain’s High Court found the bombs to be the work of Islamist extremists.

In 2013, El Mundo broke a story alleging illegal financing by the People’s Party. Other media followed with more details, and a former PP treasurer who was close to Rajoy is now in jail on charges of embezzlement, money laundering and other crimes. He and the PP both deny wrongdoing.

El Mundo remains Spain’s second most-read general-interest newspaper, with a readership of about 1.1 million, behind Prisa’s El Pais on 1.8 million, according to the media survey group EGM.

Categories: Politics, International.

Top Comments

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  • sceptic64

    “Rajoy's administration denies any involvement”.

    Lying again, then. On the day another top PP man is implicated in Gurtel.

    Feb 03rd, 2014 - 10:43 pm 0
  • St.John

    You can add that 95 percent of the Spaniards see corruption as institutionalized. In Europe, only respondents in Greece (99 percent) and Italy (97 percent) outdid Spain. (El País today)

    a follow-up on another top PP man is implicated in Gurtel: Funds allegedly given to Former Public Works chief Francisco Álvarez Cascos for PP campaigns. Former Public Works Minister Francsico Álvarez Cascos reportedly received at least 41,000 euros in kickbacks from the Gürtel corrupt businessmen’s network between 2003 and 2004.

    Feb 04th, 2014 - 04:29 am 0
  • ChrisR

    Gollum2 will be somewhere in this.

    Feb 04th, 2014 - 08:35 pm 0
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