The Washington Post shaken at the top, against the backdrop of a model crisis

(New York) An editor-in-chief who abruptly resigns, her successor who throws in the towel and a boss targeted in the columns of his newspaper: the prestigious Washington Postowned by Jeff Bezos, is going through a deep crisis.


At the heart of the storm, the new general director of “WaPo”, the Briton William Lewis, to whom Amazon founder Jeff Bezos entrusted a clear mission when he appointed him last fall: to raise the bar of this historic daily.

THE Washington Post continues to rack up prestigious Pulitzer Prizes, half a century after breaking the Watergate scandal, but has suffered a $77 million loss in 2023, despite job cuts and the disappearance of its Sunday supplement.

But this former seasoned journalist, crowned with a historic scoop at the end of the 2000s on the expenses of parliamentarians in the United Kingdom, sees his position increasingly weakened. For weeks, revelations have been multiplying about his role in the early 2010s in the management of a resounding scandal of illegal telephone tapping carried out by the tabloid News of the Worldwhile working for the Murdoch family’s conservative media group.

On Friday, William Lewis was again at the center of an investigation by his own journalists. According to Washington Posthe allegedly gave the green light in 2011 to the destruction of thousands of emails, fueling suspicions of destruction of evidence, which he denies.

Asked by AFP after the publication of this article, the Washington Post did not follow up.

Trump effect

As the American presidential election approaches, the affair is now poisoning the life of a prestigious house which “is not doing well economically”, Dan Kennedy, professor of journalism at Northeastern University, explained to AFP.

Like other media, the Washington Post took advantage of the upheaval of the Trump years in the White House (2017-2021): “he was seen as providing reliable and uncompromising coverage” of the Republican president, adds the professor.

But when Donald Trump left the White House, readers’ appetites dried up. ” THE Post was hit particularly hard. It is a newspaper that seems to say “we are the New York Times but with less to offer,” adds Dan Kennedy.

By the end of 2022, the newspaper had 2.5 million subscribers, compared to 3 million when Joe Biden took office in early 2021, according to the Wall Street Journal. Far from the growth of the New York Times (more than 10 million subscribers), the result of a strategy of diversification towards lighter content (games, cooking recipes, sport) without denying its journalistic fundamentals.

PHOTO JUSTIN T. GELLERSON, THE NEW YORK TIMES ARCHIVES

“We are losing a lot of money,” “people are not reading your articles anymore, I can’t sugarcoat things anymore,” William Lewis said at a tense meeting with the editorial staff in early June, according to American media.

“Third draft”

The day before, journalists from Washington Post had just learned of the abrupt resignation of their editor-in-chief, Sally Buzbee.

The latter would have expressed its disagreement with Mr. Lewis’ strategy, which provides for an overhaul of the editorial staff into three divisions: two, already existing, for information and opinions, and a third intended for “service information and social networks”.

PHOTO CHUCK ZOELLER, ARCHIVES ASSOCIATED PRESS

Sally Buzbee

The contours of this “third editorial” remain unclear, but it seems intended to rejuvenate the readership and develop more lucrative content, a leap into the unknown for a rather austere newspaper.

Within the Murdoch family group, William Lewis was also the boss of the Wall Street Journal (2014-2020), another flagship of the American press.

But other articles, in the New York Times and the Washington Posthave pointed out questionable methods on his part or that of Robert Winnett, one of his former colleagues whom he had chosen to succeed Sally Buzbee, such as the use of paying informants or the use of hacked telephone data.

Following these revelations, Robert Winnett threw in the towel on June 21.

For Dan Kennedy, William Lewis has no choice but to leave in turn, because “he will not have the confidence of the team.”

“The graft didn’t take,” wrote WaPo veteran David Maraniss on his Facebook page.

“If he is not able to inspire the staff […] THE “Post“will sail without direction, and its best elements will leave,” adds Dan Kennedy.

For many observers, the outcome of the crisis is in the hands of Jeff Bezos, who had offered himself the Post for $250 million in 2013. For now, he has supported his CEO.


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