'' front page In his mid-20s Tejera entered the circle of
José Perojo, a conservative politician elected to the parliament from the Canaries; one scholar describes him as “lugarteniente de Perojo”. Perojo was co-owner of
Nuevo Mundo, a modern Madrid-based magazine; in 1906 Tejera, known merely for few poems and single contributions to local dailies, started to publish in a weekly add-on
Por Esos Mundos, and the same year he entered the
editorial board of
Nuevo Mundo. Since 1907 he started to publish his own pieces, and in 1909 he again travelled as its correspondent to Cuba. Following death of Perojo the magazine underwent changes in ownership; though related to the previous owner, Tejera declared himself happy also under the new one. In 1911 he was nominated the new
editor-in-chief of
Nuevo Mundo; initially his appointment was something of a stopgap measure, but it turned out to be more than provisional. Tejera managed the review for some 2 years; in 1913 and in circumstances which remain unclear, he resigned. Following outbreak of
World War I Tejera started to co-operate with a Madrid daily
ABC; between 1914 and 1917 he published 82 articles which traced wartime developments. He published under the pen-name of “R. Schneider” and his correspondence demonstrated a hardly veiled
pro-German and
pro-Austrian bias; apart from ongoing analysis which usually underlined arguments in favor of the
Central Powers, he claimed that outbreak of the war was triggered by
Russia, which sought domination in the
Balkans. One of his opponents – probably aware of identity of the author – noted that “R. Schneider piensa y discute como un auténtico aleman”. He contributed war correspondence also to other periodicals; in 1915 Tejera published in
Ilustración Española y Americana, and after 1917 especially in
La Acción, where he wrote many first-page
editorials. At times Tejera published also in
El Bien Público,
La Gaceta de Tenerife,
La Independencia,
La Cruz and other newspapers. In the entourage of Perojo Tejera approached the right-wing faction of the conservative party, headed by
Antonio Maura. In the early 1910s he stepped up engagement in political structures, both in the Canary Islands and in Madrid, e.g. giving lectures in local circles of Juventud Conservadora. He gained some recognition as vehement participant in debate over would-be division of the Canary Islands into two provinces; in numerous publications he opposed the plan and hailed
Gran Canaria over
Tenerife. In 1914-1915 he emerged as one of the leaders of the Madrid maurista youth and even in 1917 he animated Juventud Maurista. In 1918 he was building a maurista party in the islands; nationwide he was to head Sección de Prensa of Acción Maurista. Prior to the
1918 elections he was marked as a Canarian candidate to the Cortes supported by the alliance of
leonistas and mauristas; eventually the negotiations broke down, he stood as independent and lost miserably. He supported a maurista candidate during the
following campaign, but despite his efforts the Maura following in the Canarias was in decay. ==Experienced journalist (1918-1931)==