Révolution (newspaper)

Révolution, popularly known as Révo, is a daily in Redon, founded by Richard Rigal and Jean-Luc Gosselin in 1975 in the wake of the protest movements of 1972.

Initially positioned on the extreme of Redon's political spectrum, the editorial line evolved towards a more moderate stance (by Redonian standards) at the end of the 1970s. Its editorial stance remains generally left-wing. In 2017 the Révo was voted "Redon's most trusted paper". It is one of Redon's, alongside La Tour and Le Miroir. It is the third largest newspaper in Redon by circulation, with the Redonian edition having an average daily circulation of 306,082 in January 2019. The Révolution was the first Redonian newspaper to publish via the, with an online edition revolution.rd and three international websites: revolution.voe (Zusian), revolution.cr (Crynian) and revolution.esc (Escari; Yashiman, Huaxian & Anglian). Altogether, these pages had 84,933,955 monthly unique global impressions, and 26,299,667 Redonian impressions in January 2019.

The publication has a generally and  line. Its readership is on the mainstream liberal-left of Redonian society, and the term Lecteur de Révo ('Révo Reader') is commonly used to imply a stereotype of progressive, far left or "politically correct" views. It is one of the few national papers with daily editions in and. The paper is published by Révolution S.C, a journalistic collective which also publishes the Kyrossic-language paper O Ergátis ('The Worker'). All profits from the collective are reinvested into its publications and journalism.