Subscribers and star journalists have fled the Post in its first year under CEO and Publisher Will Lewis. Now staff have signed a petition asking owner Jeff Bezos to intervene.
The left-leaning newspaper lost $100 million last year after four years of plunging website traffic as it struggles with a talent exodus, falling revenue and flailing readership amid an identity
In her report for the Journal, Bruell notes that Amazon founder and billionaire Jeff Bezos, who bought the Post in 2013 ... of interim executive editor Matt Murray and publisher William Lewis who has still not righted the ship since his hiring.
The Washington Post has abandoned its powerful “Democracy Dies in Darkness” slogan. But the new mission has left readers and staff reeling; read
Over 400 Washington Post journalists have signed a blistering petition demanding owner Jeff Bezos visit the newspaper ... paper’s most prized reporters, Lewis has been unable to convince ...
The Washington Post is rolling out a new mission statement ahead of President-elect Trump’s second term in the White House. The Post unveiled “Riveting Storytelling for All of
The newspaper, owned by Amazon.com founder Jeff Bezos, is among many news outlets struggling to ... The Post, which appointed William Lewis as its CEO in early 2024, had decided not to endorse a candidate in the November U.S. presidential election, leading ...
Not a single Democrat objected to the barrage of fascist threats made by Trump in the course of his inaugural address.
The Washington Post is one of the most storied organizations in American journalism. But it is in crisis, losing reporting talent, suffering a loss of readers and facing a staff rebellion against publisher Will Lewis.
What happened on Monday at the Capitol was the inauguration of the oligarchs. This was an inauguration of the oligarchs, the billionaires’ ball come to Washington. Donald Trump did everything but invite the tech moguls to join him in taking the oath.
The US could impose tariffs of 25 per cent on Mexican and Canadian imports from February 1, Donald Trump said, as he signed a raft of executive orders just hours after his preside