Democracy Dies in Darkness. Indeed!
As I write this, I am reading about the utter destruction and decimation of the Washington Post staff by Jeff Bezos, the billionaire owner of the newspaper since 2013, who now, in 2026 couldn’t care less about Washington’s former local paper of record and voice of conscience through the dark days of Joseph McCarthy, Watergate, and Trump 1.0. The executioners doing his bidding are a cadre of product-killers who were supposed to save the paper, not destroy it.
I joined the paper in 1970 and stayed until 2004, through the Pentagon Papers, through Watergate, through the best of times and sometimes the worst of times. I proudly bore the byline as a Washington Post Staff Writer. Mostly, I worked in Metro, but my stories appeared in every section, including many in Style, covering the Enola Gay controversy at the Smithsonian, and on many long features, some of them edited by the legendary Gene Weingarten, and in Weekend, under the former longtime local columnist, colleague and friend John Kelly.
Others, notably former Washington Post Fact Checker Glenn Kessler, have charted the paper’s editorial decline as Bezos-hired henchmen sought the secret sauce to turn a sacred public trust impossibly into a cash cow to satisfy the whims of its billionaire owner, who’s more interested in rocketing into space than what is happening on earth. What happened today, a precisely 8:30 this morning via Zoom to an imperiled staff, was nothing less than an epic tsunami. The impersonal message was delivered by Matt Murray, the executive editor. Publisher Will Lewis was AWOL, nowhere to be seen.
Truth and consequences: The recently revived Book World–gone! Most foreign bureaus, including those covering the Middle East, India and Ukraine–gone! Lizzie Johnson, in Kviv, laid off “in the middle of a war zone.” The paper’s investigative unit–seven laid off. The vaunted sports section–obliterated! The already downsized local staff, further diminished from barely consequential to virtually inconsequential. Who will turn out the lights?
Bezos once blessed the masthead slogan: “Democracy Dies in Darkness.” With the destruction of a once great newspaper, the light grows dimmer and dimmer.
Even the ageless prose poet Martin Weil, who just marked 60 years at the newspaper with some 200 notes of appreciation from former colleagues, was laid off.
Already, stories about the layoffs have appeared on multiple websites, in addition to a long story in The New York Times. But so far there is nothing in The Washington Post.
Ruth Marcus, my former colleague who entered the Post via its Prince George’s office, when I was bureau chief, posted today in The New Yorker.
From Ashley Parker, another former WP superstar now at The Atlantic: “We’re witnessing a murder. Jeff Bezos, the billionaire owner of The Washington Post, and Will Lewis, the publisher he appointed at the end of 2023, are embarking on the latest step of their plan to kill everything that makes the paper special. The Post has survived for nearly 150 years, evolving from a hometown family newspaper into an indispensable national institution, and a pillar of the democratic system. But if Bezos and Lewis continue down their present path, it may not survive much longer.”
From my friend and former Post colleague Peter Baker, now the Times chief White House correspondent: “No struggling newspaper ever saved itself by becoming a worse and less essential product. But what’s happening today at the @washingtonpost is not just the latest devastating contraction of the news industry; it’s the gutting of an American institution vital for a healthy society. For my money, the @washingtonpost sports section has been the best in the country, its foreign correspondents some of the bravest and most exceptional in the world, its metro coverage indispensable to a major region and its book section one of the first things I read on Sundays.”
This note from Marty Baron, executive editor for eight years when Bezos seemed to have a moral compass that supported the paper’s defiant slogan: “This ranks among the darkest days in the history of one of the world’s greatest news organizations.”
Don Graham, who sold the paper to Bezos with high hopes for its future, had refrained from commenting on its decline. But today he wrote on the Washington Post Alumni Facebook page: “It’s a bad day. I am sad that so many excellent reporters and editors—and old friends—are losing their jobs. My first concern is for them; I will do anything I can to help. I will have to learn a new way to read the paper, since I have started with the sports page since the late 1940’s. I will always want the Washington Post to succeed—and you should too. It makes a difference. The paper has another strong, stand-up editor in Matt Murray. And it still has a great staff.”

FYI, the Washington Post Guild has launched a “Washington Post 2026 Layoff” GoFundMe site, with a goal of raising $250,000 for former employees.
What on Earth!
Washington Post print subscribers might have noticed an insert with the Sunday paper. It was a promotion for a young adult supplement of “America As It Happened: Part 1, Earliest Time to Colonization,” somehow linked to the upcoming 250th anniversary of American independence. Oddly, the timeline that runs across the bottom throughout omits a key year: 1619. That, of course, was when the first enslaved people arrived in Virginia. This foundational year was key to the New York Times 1619 Project, which posed that our history began not in 1776 but with the introduction of slaves in the British colonies. The entire back page of the promotional insert is sponsored by “The Trump Kennedy Center,” with Kennedy-Center.org, “The ONLY OFFICIAL WEBSITE of the Trump Kennedy Center.”
It turns out that “What on Earth!’ is the product of a UK-based company (rather ironic celebrating the American Revolution) that is published by the UK-based Toucan Books, mostly for young adults. The text is copyright by What on Earth Publishing, Ltd. and there appears a long list “For The Washington Post,” starting with masthead names (William Lewis, Publisher & CEO), and descending to those of many staffers, who may or may not have been laid off. Among them is Toluse “Tolu” Olorunnipa, a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and author who is now on the staff of The Atlantic.
Gene,
It’s a sad day for the country. You nailed it with “who’s more interested in rocketing into space than what is happening on earth.”
Gene – I was so angry after Bezos interfered with the Post’s endorsement for President before the 2024 election, I stopped getting the paper. I only renewed my subscription a few months ago. Now I’ll let go of it again. My main reason for resubscribing was for local news and also the much reduced Book World. As is often said, there is a special place in Hell for ________ – and I’d put Bezos in the blank space.