The National Record
Type | Daily newspaper |
---|---|
Format | Tabloid |
Publisher | TNR Publishing SàRL |
Founded | 1955 |
Political alignment | Centre-left |
Language | |
Headquarters | Arnak, Herlan |
Country | Gylias |
Circulation | 1,6 million (as of 2020) |
Website | http://www.nationalrecord.gls/ |
The National Record (French reformed: L'Régistre Nationale) is a Gylian newspaper, founded in 1955.
History
It was founded in 1955, through the merger of several moderate papers in the Free Territories.
Influenced by its headquarters in the location of the Arnak Trials, it distinguished itself in the 1960s through a strong pro-veteran stance, often supporting the Veterans for a Just Peace and the Gylian consensus as the manifestation of the "just peace".
The 1990s saw it adopt new technology such as digital printing, establish its website, and digitise its archives through BiblioNet.
Profile
Its political orientation is centre-left, closer to liberalism. It has been critical of the Centre Group's alignment with the National Bloc, which it describes as an "accident of history".
It publishes editions in English, French, and Gylic, with the latter edition using the various Gylic languages based on the native language of the respective writer or region referred to in the story.
Ownership and organisation
The National Record is owned and published by TNR Publishing, legally constituted as an SàRL. Its headquarters are in Arnak, Herlan.
The newspaper has a 5-member Management Board and a 10-member Supervisory Board, elected yearly.
Its revenue comes from newsagent's sales, paid subscriptions, online orders, and donations. Donors are listed at the end of each issue. It accepts classified advertising.