Europa Press

Europa Press is a Spanish news agency founded in 1953.[1][2] It broadcasts news 24 hours a day, publishing 3,000 articles on average per day. Originally founded as a book distribution company by five monarchists, Europa Press became a news agency in 1966.[3] It became a competitor to the State-run Agencia EFE.[4]

Europa Press
IndustryNews media
Founded1953
FounderTorcuato Luca de Tena
Headquarters,
Spain
ProductsWire service
Websiteeuropapress.es

History

In September 23, 1953, Luca de Tena published on ABC with Lavrenti Pavlovich Beria, leader of the Soviet police, was in Spain after run away from the death of Stalin.[5] Due to no one could check the information, Luca de Tena was dismissed.[5] When he was thirty, he decided to write books and edit novel and pamphlet,[5] so he founded an individual agency called Agencia Europea, where he admitted his allies Florentino Pérez Embid, Andrés Rueda, Lluis Valls, Gonzalo Fernández de la Mora and Javier García Vinuesa.[6], with the aim of creating and spreading editorial material such as books, novels and brochures with pictures about summaries of successful theatre plays or movies.[7]

The name 'Europa' responds to the European vocation of this founding group. At the beginning, the name was accompanied with 'Documents and International reports'. Four years later, in 1957, due to the prosperous beginning of the business, Luca de Tena registered it like Agencia Europa Press.[7], as it is still called today. The his first logotype represented Zeus transformed in a bull while he is kidnapping Europe, and in turn it represented Europe like an ideal politic and social region.[7]

This project initially associated with Florentino Pérez Embid, Andrés Rueda, Luis Valls, Gonzalo Fernández de la Mora, Javier García Vinuesa, Antonio Fontán and Ángel Benito, among others. The agency has had four head offices, always in Madrid and the actual one is at Paseo de la Castellana.

In 1963, Antonio Herrero Losada was named director, a post he held until his retirement from active journalism in 1989. That same year a big capital increase was made along with the change of the head office, leading to substantial growth over the next years. In 1966, Europa Press started its informative service, competing with agencies like Efe, Logos, Pyresa, Fiel or Mencheta. A key person entered in the agency in 1968: Francisco Martín Fernández de Heredia. His personal and professional activities avoided in 1969 the shutdown of company. At the same time, he strengthened the business project in the following years until it became the solid multimedia group that it is today.

Despite the political pressures suffered, mainly in the second part of 1960s, specially from the Information and Tourism Ministry, run by Manuel Fraga (he wanted the agency to merge with Efe and he even asked clients to end their contracts with Europa Press), the agency made it through in part thanks to Francisco Martín, that had been named managing director shortly before this conflict. Francisco Martín (1922-2011) kept playing a fundamental role in the company's growth during the next decades until the end of the 1990s when he delegated his functions to his descendants.

In 1970, Europa Press started a new service that was called 'Economic Summary', concerning political and economic information of the day and was later distributed by post to the clients. This way information was more easily transmitted because it saved part of the censorship that the official channels suffered at that time. During the 1970s, Europa Press achieved some of its major successes, such as giving the worldwide exclusive of the death of the dictator Francisco Franco and on the following year the designation of Adolfo Suárez as President of the Government The press coverage of the disease and death of Francisco Franco translated into the National Journalism Award in 1975.

In the 1990s, the agency started its territorial expansion and opened business delegations in each one of the autonomous communities of Spain, as well as created services in Catalan, Basque, Galician and Asturian.

In 2005, the platform 'Desayunos Informativos' was created. It was one of the first forums for debates in Spain. Presidents of the Government, ministers, presidents of Autonomous Communities, High Statal Institutions, foreign Prime Ministers have been some of the public figures that have participated in the ‘Desayunos’.

In 2012, it was published that Europa Press has closed three years in negative equity because of the loss of clients and the reduction of its sponsorships -many of them were institutional or depended on public companies--. The agency implemented a strategy based on the control of expenses and on April 11 fired 7 workers, 36 hours after of knowing that Journalist Union of Madrid has called sindical elections in three companies of the group.

Areas

The Europa Press group is made up of several independent limited-liability companies, built around seven areas of business:

  • Europa Press Noticias
    • Notimérica (Noticias de América Latina)
  • Europa Press Televisión
  • Europa Press Reportajes
  • Europa Press Comunicación
  • Europa Press Internet
  • Europa Press Ediciones
  • Europa Press.Net

Personnel

  • Antonio Herrero Losada: He was the director during years, and could show truth, freedom of speech, and courageousness to the editors.[8] It involved penalties which was about to have his job losen.[9] When he retired in 1989, he wrote the history of the agency,[9] but he couldn't finish it because he died in August 1992.[10]
  • José Mario Armero Alcántara: He was president of Europa Press during decades after the end of the Francoist Spain.[11] He was a very important figure to the Spanish transition to democracy, and served to Juan Carlos I and Adolfo Suárez.[9] Armero Alcántar carried on writing the history of the agency which Herrero Losada started.[10]
  • Francisco Martín Fernández Heredia: He was president of Junta de Fundadores, chief executive officer and then president of Europa Press[12] after the death of Armero Alcántara.[9] Fernández Heredia administrated the resources of the agency.[9] He sent a letter to Carrero Blanco so he could save the vanishing of the agency.[9] At the beginning of 2007, Fernández Heredia planned to finish writing the history of the agency, but it was ended by Jesús Frías Alonso.[10]

References

  1. "Europa Press". Telecinco (in Spanish). Retrieved 2023-02-13.
  2. "Busqueda de Autor | La Prensa Panama". La Prensa (Panama City) (in Spanish). Retrieved 2023-02-13.
  3. Barrera, Carlos; Apezarena, José (2013). "In Democracy As in Dictatorship: Government Pressures on the Spanish Private News Agency Europa Press". The International Journal of Press/Politics. 18 (2): 189. doi:10.1177/1940161212474306.
  4. Barrera & Apezarena 2013, p. 188.
  5. Frías Alonso 2012, p. 14, "Los inicios de Europa Press".
  6. Frías Alonso 2012, p. 15, "Los inicios de Europa Press".
  7. Frías Alonso 2012, p. 10, "Prólogo".
  8. José Apezarena (2011). Antonio Herrero Losada y Europa Press (Thesis) (in Spanish). Universidad de Navarra.
  9. Frías Alonso 2012, p. 11, "Prólogo".
  10. Frías Alonso 2012, p. 12, "Prólogo".
  11. "Mario Armero, notario". El País (in Spanish). 1983-01-28. ISSN 1134-6582. Retrieved 2023-02-13.
  12. Arrosagaray, Marcelino Martín (2011-09-25). "Francisco Martín, defensor de la libertad de expresión". El País (in Spanish). ISSN 1134-6582. Retrieved 2023-02-13.

Bibliography

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