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News

Las Vegas – Review-Journal Ends Decades-Long Printing of Rival Sun

By Matthias Binder April 9, 2026
LETTER: Short-sighted decision
LETTER: Short-sighted decision (Featured Image)
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LETTER: Short-sighted decision

Contents
A Partnership Born of NecessityLegal Disputes Escalate to Supreme CourtReview-Journal Defends Move as NecessarySun Prepares for Independent PathReaders and Experts Assess the Fallout

A Partnership Born of Necessity (Image Credits: Unsplash)

Las Vegas – The Las Vegas Review-Journal ceased printing the Las Vegas Sun as a daily insert on April 3, 2026, marking the first time in 76 years that the smaller paper appeared without a physical edition.[1][2] This move concluded a prolonged legal battle over their joint operating agreement and drew immediate reactions from readers who valued the bundled perspectives. The decision highlights broader challenges facing print journalism amid digital shifts and antitrust concerns.

A Partnership Born of Necessity

The alliance between the two papers traced back to financial pressures in the late 20th century. The Review-Journal, founded in 1909, handled printing, distribution, and advertising sales under agreements that allowed the Sun to focus on content while receiving monthly payments.[1] The Sun launched in 1950 amid a labor dispute with the Review-Journal’s predecessor, backed by Hank Greenspun, whose family retains ownership today.[2]

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A 1989 joint operating agreement transformed the Sun into an afternoon edition on weekdays and a weekend section in the Review-Journal. An amendment in 2005 shifted it to a daily morning insert, preserving editorial independence under the 1970 Newspaper Preservation Act.[3] This setup, the nation’s last of its kind, enabled competing voices – conservative-leaning Review-Journal and liberal-leaning Sun – in a single delivery.

Legal Disputes Escalate to Supreme Court

Tensions boiled over in 2019 when Review-Journal owners sought to terminate the arrangement. The Sun sued, claiming antitrust violations, but courts ruled the 2005 amendment unenforceable for lacking U.S. Attorney General approval.[1] A 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals panel upheld this in August 2025, and the Supreme Court declined the Sun’s appeal in February 2026.[2]

Judges dissolved injunctions forcing continued printing, paving the way for the April halt. The Review-Journal described the outcome as a victory after 6½ years of litigation “precipitated by the Sun.”[3] Both papers appeared in U.S. District Court on April 3, with the Sun requesting immediate resumption.

Review-Journal Defends Move as Necessary

The Review-Journal argued the agreement had become unlawful and burdensome. It accused the Sun of breaching terms by filling pages with non-local content, such as a Colorado editorial urging colonoscopies, rather than amplifying its voice.[3] “We are no longer printing the Sun because the courts have twice declared it would be unlawful for us to continue doing so,” the paper stated in an editorial.[3]

Executives emphasized they welcomed competition but refused to subsidize operations. “It is time the Sun stood up on its own two feet,” the editorial concluded, noting the Sun’s online presence and social media reach.[1] The paper pledged to maintain robust local coverage across platforms.

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Sun Prepares for Independent Path

Sun leaders vowed resilience despite the setback. Attorney Leif Reid called the halt “irreparable harm to our community, as no one benefits when a local newspaper is prevented from being published.”[1] Chief Operating Officer Robert Cauthorn said staff prepared pages for potential Saturday publication.[2]

The paper, owned by the Greenspun family, plans to explore standalone printing while leaning on its website. Legal efforts continue, though experts predict challenges in recruiting talent and retaining print readers.[4]

Readers and Experts Assess the Fallout

Local reactions underscored concerns over viewpoint diversity. One reader, Sean Cahill, expressed disappointment in a letter to the Review-Journal, noting he subscribed for the combined news and opinions. He planned to cancel, arguing the Sun served a complementary role in a polarized media landscape.[4]

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Journalism professors highlighted risks. University of Kansas’ Genelle Belmas lamented the loss of bundled perspectives, warning of echo chambers online. UNLV’s Stephen Bates noted Las Vegas’s vibrant independent outlets as a buffer.[2]

Aspect Review-Journal Las Vegas Sun
Founded 1909 1950
Ownership Adelson family Greenspun family
Editorial Lean Conservative Liberal
Current Focus Standalone print/digital Digital, seeking print

Key Takeaways

  • The split ends the U.S.’s last joint operating agreement under the 1970 Act.[1]
  • Courts deemed the 2005 terms unenforceable without federal sign-off.[3]
  • Both papers maintain digital operations amid print’s decline.

This rift signals the twilight of print duopolies, forcing Vegas readers to navigate fragmented sources. Yet robust local journalism persists through independents and online platforms. What do you think about the end of this print tradition? Tell us in the comments.

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