Carlos Carnicero
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9 September 1951
Carlos Carnicero | |
|---|---|
| Born | Carlos Carnicero Giménez de Azcárate 9 September 1951 Zaragoza, Spain |
| Died | 1 July 2025 (aged 73) Madrid, Spain |
| Notable work | Canal Sur, El Periódico de Catalunya, Europa Press, Telecinco, 13TV and the magazine Viajar |
Carlos Carnicero Giménez de Azcárate (9 September 1951 – 1 July 2025) was a Spanish journalist, presenter and politician. During the last years of the Franco dictatorship and the beginning of the Spanish Transition, he was federal secretary of organization of the Carlist Party, which was then part of the Democratic Junta in the opposition to the Franco regime.[1] He was a candidate for the Congress of Deputies in 1977, as number 2 of the list of the Aragonese Autonomist Front in Zaragoza, and in 1979, as number 1 on the list of the Carlist Party of Euskadi in Guipúzcoa. [2]
Written press
With degrees in law and economics from the Basque Country and Complutense University of Madrid, he began his professional career as a journalist in the print media. He contributed to El Diario Vasco and La Voz de España. He was director of the now-defunct magazine Contrapunto for two years.
In 1982, he joined the magazine Tiempo de Hoy, where he became deputy director and remained until 1988. In May of that year, he joined a new project and collaborated on the launch of a new publication: Tribuna. In June 1989, he joined Diario 16 as deputy editor, remaining in that position until 1991, when he was appointed editor of Panorama (Spanish magazine) (until 1993). After the publication of that magazine, he continued as editor of Viajar.