I'll (try to) keep it short and give simple reasons for what I say.
First of all, START with a single-stage press.
I would put the RCBS Rockchucker or the Hornady Classic equally at the top of the list.
Now here's the reasons why, and in my personal suggested order of importance:
1. You are just starting out. The press itself is really a small part of the whole reloading "experience".
You will be learning a lot about additional equipment you will need/want, and you are better off learning the process with a single-stage so that you can control the process and not let it get the better of you. A progressive has you learning and doing lots of things at the same time, and reloading isn't something to do while you are distracted fiddling with the many moving parts of a progressive trying to make it work.
2. Starting with a single-stage means that you can start sort of "cheap" in the big scheme of things.
It's very possible that you quickly become either bored with it or impatient with it and wish you had never gotten into it.
Why dump more money into something that you really aren't committed to yet?
3. And this is sort of a big reason even though it's listed third...
You ARE going to want a single-stage press even after you start loading with a progressive.
When I bought my Hornady LnL Progressive, I almost gave away my Rockchucker to a friend, but I immediately realized that there are several things that the single-stage will do better and more efficiently, and the single-stage makes a great "partner" for your progressive.
With my Rockchucker, I still load small experimental batches that aren't worth the time to set up on the LnL.
The small frame of the Rockchucker handles doing some Bulge Busting with ease, something that would be quite clumsy on the progressive.
The Rockchucker is used exclusively for decapping military .223 in preparation for swaging and tumbling the brass.
Other stuff too, but those are the highlights.
4. Related to #1 above, you will probably learn from others as you go, and you will vacillate back and forth between all the opinions you will get (you will be inundated by the "Blue Army" who will treat you like garbage if you don't buy a Dillon), so you will slowly form you own opinions about things to buy next and methods you use along the way.
Those are why I think anyone just getting into reloading should start with a single-stage.
I shopped for months before I decided on the Hornady LnL Progressive, so I did a lot of research after having loaded on my Rockchucker for over 30 years.
Now it's time for you to make your own path, but the first step of a long journey is a first step, and the first stage of beginning a long and interesting lifetime of reloading, I think, should start with a single-stage.
Whatever you do, make sure you have fun along the way.