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This article has several issues, in my view. For each issue, I have a proposal:
Of course, also the introduction and, generally-speaking the texts can be improved.
What do you think? Cheers, -- Checco ( talk) 17:48, 26 May 2020 (UTC)
Any reader of the newspaper would recognise that it is liberal, not merely economic-liberal. It holds a broadly liberal and, to some extent, progressive worldview. The newspaper's older predecessor, Il Sole, was launched by liberals and, more precisely, radicals, reformists democrats and republicans (see history), while 24 Ore had an even more social-liberal worldview and its founders included Piero Colombi ( Action Party), Roberto Tremelloni ( Italian Democratic Socialist Party) and Eugenio Scalfari. Surely, the newspaper is owned by Confindustria, but being pro-business does not equal to economic liberalism. Il Sole 24 Ore is not merely an economic newspaper, thus, through its editorial line and its editorials, it gives a liberal to progressive interpretation of events. It is no surprise that most of its recent editors have been centre-left journalists and/or intellectuals, notably including Mario Deaglio (husband of Elsa Fornero and brother of Enrico Deaglio), Ernesto Auci (who has been recently involved in two liberal parties, Civic Choice and More Europe), Guido Gentili (hailing from the Italian Republican Party), Ferruccio de Bortoli, Gianni Riotta, Roberto Napolenano and Fabio Tamburini. While most editors have been distinctively social-liberal, others like Salvatore Carrubba (close to Forza Italia) have been distinctively liberal. Also, several of them have been involved in liberal think tanks, like Fondazione Luigi Einaudi. Moreover, also editorialists are usually liberal and/or centre-left types, and some of them have been involved in liberal and/or progressive parties. The newspaper is economic-liberal (moderately so), social-liberal, liberal internationalist and pro-Europeanist, in one word liberal. -- Checco ( talk) 12:51, 20 August 2023 (UTC)
![]() | This article is rated List-class on Wikipedia's
content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
This article has several issues, in my view. For each issue, I have a proposal:
Of course, also the introduction and, generally-speaking the texts can be improved.
What do you think? Cheers, -- Checco ( talk) 17:48, 26 May 2020 (UTC)
Any reader of the newspaper would recognise that it is liberal, not merely economic-liberal. It holds a broadly liberal and, to some extent, progressive worldview. The newspaper's older predecessor, Il Sole, was launched by liberals and, more precisely, radicals, reformists democrats and republicans (see history), while 24 Ore had an even more social-liberal worldview and its founders included Piero Colombi ( Action Party), Roberto Tremelloni ( Italian Democratic Socialist Party) and Eugenio Scalfari. Surely, the newspaper is owned by Confindustria, but being pro-business does not equal to economic liberalism. Il Sole 24 Ore is not merely an economic newspaper, thus, through its editorial line and its editorials, it gives a liberal to progressive interpretation of events. It is no surprise that most of its recent editors have been centre-left journalists and/or intellectuals, notably including Mario Deaglio (husband of Elsa Fornero and brother of Enrico Deaglio), Ernesto Auci (who has been recently involved in two liberal parties, Civic Choice and More Europe), Guido Gentili (hailing from the Italian Republican Party), Ferruccio de Bortoli, Gianni Riotta, Roberto Napolenano and Fabio Tamburini. While most editors have been distinctively social-liberal, others like Salvatore Carrubba (close to Forza Italia) have been distinctively liberal. Also, several of them have been involved in liberal think tanks, like Fondazione Luigi Einaudi. Moreover, also editorialists are usually liberal and/or centre-left types, and some of them have been involved in liberal and/or progressive parties. The newspaper is economic-liberal (moderately so), social-liberal, liberal internationalist and pro-Europeanist, in one word liberal. -- Checco ( talk) 12:51, 20 August 2023 (UTC)