Schwäbisches Tagblatt

The Swabian day sheet ( colloquially in its distribution area often shortened as the daily paper called ) is a appearing in the eponymous publishing house in Tübingen daily newspaper, published since 1945. It is the largest circulation local or regional press organ in the district of Tübingen in Baden-Württemberg and is primarily sold through subscriptions. Paid circulation is 41 394 copies.

The editorial staff in Tübingen as well as in the field offices Rottenburg am Neckar ( Rottenburger post), Mossingen ( Steinlach messenger ) and Reutlingen make only the local and regional section of the newspaper ( Neckar- Alb). The supra-regional mantle part is delivered by the resident in Ulm Südwestpresse, which owns nearly 50 percent of the publisher. The daily paper is after the original Südwestpresse ( appearing in Ulm, Neu -Ulm and the Alb- Donau-Kreis ) whose circulation - based second largest regional edition with around 30 connected to the Südwestpresse locally appearing newspapers especially in Baden -Wurttemberg, a smaller proportion in Bavaria.

The publisher is also out for the weekly free Ad Journal daily paper indicator.

Reception

The orientation of the daily paper was in its regional member during at least 35 years of chief editorial era of Christoph Müller ( 1969-2004 ) as tends leftish marked to the left; for a Swabian newspaper with regional and state - based conservative majority embossed environment (also press environment ) unusual. So the daily paper was / is colloquially associative with respect to the current flowing through Neckar Tübingen and the most famous Soviet daily newspaper - of followers ironically provocative, meant pejoratively by opponents - sometimes referred to as " Neckar- Pravda " means. In contrast, the adopted by the Südwestpresse on regional cover part can be rather associated with a bourgeois- liberal-conservative direction.

Worldwide attention learned the Swabian day sheet 2002: An editor of the paper had heard how the former German Federal Minister of Justice and Tübingen constituency MPs Herta Däubler -Gmelin (SPD ) in a local union meeting supposedly the foreign policy of U.S. President George W. Bush with Adolf Hitler compared. More content and context of the statement are to be controversial, but the incident ultimately led to the resignation Däubler- Gmelin from her ministerial office.

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