La Nación (Spain)

[1][2] Sponsored and financed by the administration of the Dictatorship of Primo de Rivera, it had a staff that was also the basis of the newspaper: "Justicia, Paz y Trabajo" (Justice, Peace and Work).

[10] From February 1933, coinciding with Hitler's rise to power, the newspaper launched a campaign in favor of fascism as a mass political alternative for Spain, under the supervision of Mussolini's regime.

From December 1935 to March 1936, the subjects of most interest were articles on revolution and counterrevolution, aimed at mobilizing right-wing groups with the objective of putting an end to the Republican regime established in Spain.

The threatening tone of an even more tragic revolution if the Popular Front supporters triumphed was decisive in countless information, opinion articles and editorials.

In retaliation for the attack against the socialist professor Luis Jiménez de Asúa, in which his police escort was killed, the newspaper's workshops were set on fire and practically destroyed in their entirety.