#351 2025-02-26 11:32:54
Jeff Bezos announces ‘significant shift’ coming to the Washington Post. A key editor is leaving because of it
By Liam Reilly, CNN
Updated: 11:17 AM EST, Wed February 26, 2025
Source: CNN
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Washington Post owner Jeff Bezos on Wednesday announced a “significant shift” to the publisher’s opinion page that led David Shipley, the paper’s editorial page editor, to leave the paper. The changes upended precedent and rattled a media company that has already been shaken by years of turmoil and leadership turnover.
As part of the overhaul, the Post will publish daily opinion stories on two editorial “pillars”: personal liberties and free markets, Bezos teased in an X post on Wednesday morning after announcing the change in a company-wide email. The Post’s opinion section will cover other subjects, too, Bezos wrote, but “viewpoints opposing those pillars will be left to be published by others.”
“I’m confident that free markets and personal liberties are right for America,” Bezos wrote. “I also believe these viewpoints are underserved in the current market of ideas and news opinion. I’m excited for us together to fill that void.”
In announcing the shift, the billionaire media mogul championed the changes as based in American principles anchored in “freedom.” This freedom, Bezos emphasized, “is ethical — it minimizes coercion — and practical — it drives creativity, invention, and prosperity.”
As a basis for the change, Bezos noted that legacy opinion sections have become outdated and have been replaced by the internet.
“There was a time when a newspaper, especially one that was a local monopoly, might have seen it as a service to bring to the reader’s doorstep every morning a broad-based opinion section that sought to cover all views,” Bezos said via X. “Today, the internet does that job.”
David Shipley leaves the Post
Bezos also shared that David Shipley, the Post’s editorial page editor, would part ways with the company. Shipley had been offered a role in leading Bezos’ planned changes but decided to step away instead.
“I offered David Shipley, whom I greatly admire, the opportunity to lead this new chapter,” Bezos wrote on X. “I suggested to him that if the answer wasn’t ‘hell yes,’ then it had to be ‘no.’ After careful consideration, David decided to step away. This is a significant shift, it won’t be easy, and it will require 100% commitment — I respect his decision.”
Bezos said the Post will search for a new opinion editor to “own” the paper’s new editorial direction.
In an email to the Post’s editorial team obtained by CNN, Shipley noted his decision to leave the publisher was reached “after reflection on how I can best move forward in the profession I love.”
“I will always be thankful for the opportunity I was given to work alongside a team of opinion journalists whose commitment to strong, innovative, reported commentary inspired me every day — and was affirmed by two Pulitzer Prizes and two Loeb Awards in two short years,” Shipley wrote in the email.
Post staffers lash out
Bezos’ announcement was immediately met with hostility by some Post staffers who publicly took issue with the move.
Jeff Stein, the publisher’s chief economics reporter, called the overhaul a “massive encroachment by Jeff Bezos” that makes it clear “dissenting views will not be published or tolerated there.”
“I still have not felt encroachment on my journalism on the news side of coverage, but if Bezos tries interfering with the news side I will be quitting immediately and letting you know,” Stein said on X.
Amanda Katz, who stepped down from her role on the Post’s Opinion team at the end of 2024, called the change “an absolute abandonment of the principles of accountability of the powerful, justice, democracy, human rights, and accurate information that previously animated the section in favor of a white male billionaire’s self-interested agenda.” And columnist Philip Bump, who pens the Post’s weekly “How to Read This Chart” newsletter, pithily said “what the actual f**k” on Bluesky.
Meanwhile, conservatives are celebrating Bezos’ changes. Charlie Kirk, the Turning Point USA founder, hailed the change as “the culture […] changing rapidly for the better.” And Elon Musk, whose SpaceX is a direct rival of Bezos’ Blue Origins, succinctly applauded on X, saying “Bravo, @JeffBezos!”
Following the transformation’s internal announcement, Will Lewis, the paper’s publisher and chief executive, noted in an internal email obtained by CNN that the “recalibrate[ion]” was “not about siding with any political party,” but, rather, about “being crystal clear about what we stand for as a newspaper.”
“Doing this is a critical part of serving as a premier news publication across America and for all Americans,” Lewis wrote to Post staffers.
As Shipley exits the Post on Friday, Lewis said he would put together an interim arrangement, adding that the editorial page editor’s replacement would be announced in “due course” — and be “someone who is wholehearted in their support for free markets and personal liberties.”
Bezos and the Post’s new direction
The divisive overhaul comes months after Bezos blocked the Opinion page’s endorsement of former Vice President Kamala Harris at the eleventh hour, ending decades of precedent. Since Bezos’ block of the op-ed, a chain reaction has hounded the Post, with 250,000 Post readers canceling their subscriptions and several Opinion staffers resigning in protest. The Post has also hemorrhaged reporters, who have signed with rival publications rather than remain at the ailing outlet.
The massive changeup comes months after Bezos admitted in his defense of the op-ed block that his Amazon and Blue Origin business interests have served as a “complexifier for the Post.”
In the run-up to November’s election, Silicon Valley media moguls were seen cozying up to then-candidate Trump, hedging their bets in the event of a conservative presidential victory. Critics said Bezos was trying to change the Post’s editorial strategy to gain favorability with Trump, who has grown close to Elon Musk, whose SpaceX is a direct rival of Bezos’ own business. Bezos pushed back on those accusations in a rare October op-ed.
“When it comes to the appearance of conflict, I am not an ideal owner of The Post,” Bezos wrote. “You can see my wealth and business interests as a bulwark against intimidation, or you can see them as a web of conflicting interests.”
“Only my own principles can tip the balance from one to the other,” he wrote in October.
Bezos’ “appearance of conflict” is issued from his numerous holdings, which include his Amazon and spacefaring company, Blue Origin. Bezos’ Amazon is also still facing a lawsuit from the FTC and 17 states, who accuse the company of abusing its economic dominance and harming fair competition.
CNN’s Brian Stelter contributed to this report.
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#352 2025-03-01 06:12:41
I canceled my subscription last fall. It is not the paper it once was.
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#353 2025-03-01 10:40:03
I know that the next time someone says "personal liberties" to me I'm going to projectile vomit all over them.
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#354 2025-03-01 14:42:27
The next time someone says something to me about 'personal liberties' I'm going to look at them quizzically and says, "Does that include mine, as a trans woman?"
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#355 2025-03-13 16:55:37
Why I Left the Washington Post
Owner Jeff Bezos wants to transform the Opinions section of the paper, where I worked for forty years. After the publisher killed my column disagreeing with that move—it appears here in full—I decided to quit.
"Will's decision to not run the column that I wrote respectfully dissenting from Jeff's edict—something that I have not experienced in almost two decades of column-writing—underscores that the traditional freedom of columnists to select the topics they wish to address and say what they think has been dangerously eroded," Marcus wrote.
After 40 years, 6 months, and 6 days at the Post (but who's counting?), Marcus has had enough. "I love the Post. It breaks my heart to conclude that I must leave."
Meanwhile, Bezos has been busy dining at Mar-a-Lago, donating to Trump's inauguration, and buying Melania's documentary for a cool $40 million.
On December 12th, Amazon said that it would follow Meta's lead and donate a million dollars to Trump's Inauguration. On December 18th, Bezos and his fiancée, Lauren Sánchez, dined with Trump and Melania at Mar-a-Lago, joined by Elon Musk. "In this term, everybody wants to be my friend," Trump observed. He had reason to think as much. On January 5th, Amazon announced that it had bought the rights to a documentary about Melania, co-produced by Melania herself. Puck's Matthew Belloni reported that the streaming service was paying forty million dollars to license the film—reportedly the most Amazon had ever spent on a documentary, and almost three times the highest competing bid. The Wall Street Journal reported that Melania stood to pocket more than seventy per cent of that fee—and that, at the Mar-a-Lago dinner, Melania "regaled" Bezos and Sánchez with details about the project.
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#356 2025-03-13 19:53:13
About to ditch Amazon for other world's of streaming services... the very last of me dealing with Bezo's Monster.
I found that the platform had ripped my publishing off for several years, even selling stuff that I had pulled. I found my work being advertized by Fucking Walmart for fuck's sake. The irony is that Amazon constantly underreported sales so as not to have to pay out anything.
Last edited by SpacePuppy (2025-03-13 19:54:05)
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#357 2025-03-14 11:19:38
Johnny_Rotten wrote:
and that, at the Mar-a-Lago dinner, Melania "regaled" Bezos and Sánchez with details about the project.
Did she "regale" them in a back room or right at the table?
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#358 2025-03-14 14:07:08
Baywolfe wrote:
Johnny_Rotten wrote:
and that, at the Mar-a-Lago dinner, Melania "regaled" Bezos and Sánchez with details about the project.
Did she "regale" them in a back room or right at the table?
On top of the table.
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#359 2025-03-14 15:45:30
SpacePuppy wrote:
Baywolfe wrote:
Johnny_Rotten wrote:
and that, at the Mar-a-Lago dinner, Melania "regaled" Bezos and Sánchez with details about the project.
Did she "regale" them in a back room or right at the table?
On top of the table.
While staring daggers at Donald.
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#360 2025-03-15 17:14:29
On Saturday, government-employed journalists at Voice of America (VoA) were put on administrative leave, a day after Trump signed an order eliminating the US Agency for Global Media (USAGM), VoA’s parent company, along with six other federal agencies.
The decision to place VoA employees on administrative leave came a day after its parent moved to terminate contracts with the Associated Press, Reuters and Agence France-Presse, and told its journalists on Friday to stop using material from the wire services.
Kari Lake, the former broadcaster turned Republican politician who was selected by Trump to run VoA, estimated the move would save $53m and said: “We should not be paying outside news organizations to tell us what the news is.”
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#361 2025-03-15 22:13:42
We should not be paying outside news organizations to tell us what the news is.
Exactly, how dare legitimate news agencies tell us what the news is?
"There are times when there are absolute rights and absolute wrongs but they almost always involve a body count."
-- President Josiah Bartlett, The West Wing
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