[Note 1] Despite the change of ownership, La Libertad would consolidate in these years as the left-wing newspaper of Juan March —while Informaciones was the right-wing one—.
Its success is evidenced by the fact that it published 250,000 copies on the day the sentence was carried out against those convicted of the Andalusian Mail Train Robbery.
It published good quality feuilletons (Eckermann, Dickens, Mérimée, Dumas Jr., Goethe, Murger, Verne, Répide, Palacio Valdés, Conan Doyle, etc.)
well illustrated first by Carlos Sáenz de Tejada and then by Francisco Rivero Gil, while the caricatures were reserved for Exoristo Salmerón and Ricardo Marín, although the youngest of the Machado brothers, José, also made his dabbling as a cartoonist.
[9] Nevertheless, La Libertad scored notable news successes: On November 26, 1935, a group of monarchists and right-wingers led by Fernando Cobián, son of the former minister Eduardo Cobián, stood in front of the newspaper's headquarters in the early evening "with the purpose of carrying out an aggression as a protest against an article published by the newspaper in the morning edition".