Under orders from Jeff Bezos, one of the richest men in the world, The Washington Post laid off a third of its staff Wednesday, eliminating or hollowing out its coverage of international news, books, local news and sports. “I was just laid off by The Washington Post in the middle of a warzone,” Ukraine correspondent Lizzie Johnson wrote on X, next to a photo of her writing a report by headlamp in a car. “I have no words. I’m devastated.”
Since the advent of the internet, there has rarely been a day of good news about the news industry itself — but Wednesday’s bloodbath feels particularly bleak. What’s happening at the Post is the latest example of a billionaire oligarch devastating our information environment and, with it, our democracy. And it underscores how we’re approaching a tipping point in the decline in national institutional media — for which independent media cannot easily substitute.
When Amazon founder Jeff Bezos purchased the Post in 2013, he was hailed by many as a “white knight” whose extraordinary wealth and business acumen would be a boon for one of the great American broadsheets.
For most of his tenure, Bezos reportedly let editors run the paper without interference. But then, apparently spurred by changes in the political winds, he became heavy-handed. In fall 2024, with Trump’s potential return to the White House looming, Bezos himself quashed the paper’s editorial endorsing then-Vice President Kamala Harris for president. Then, a cartoonist resigned after she said her depiction of Bezos — and other billionaires — kneeling before Trump was rejected. And the paper gutted its opinion section to become more friendly to the right and to silence progressive dissent. None of the changes can be explained by Bezos’ concerns about fiscal health; covering the Post’s losses are an infinitesimal fraction of his wealth. The changes reflect his personal priorities.
We are in an acutely dangerous place when huge swaths of the media ecosystem are owned by untouchably rich people.
Bezos’ gutting of the Post comes as biotech billionaire Patrick Soon-Shiong is pushing the Los Angeles Times to the right, and the billionaire Ellison family is transforming CBS News into a MAGA-friendly news operation. This is to say nothing of the social media sector, where mega-billionaire Elon Musk wrecked Twitter, Meta’s weather vane billionaire CEO Mark Zuckerberg alters algorithms depending on who controls the government and TikTok is now partially in the hands of billionaire Trump allies.
We are in an acutely dangerous place when huge swaths of the media ecosystem are owned by untouchably rich people. Their primary interest is in enriching themselves using their highly profitable assets, and they possess no obligation to protect democratic norms if it doesn’t strike their fancy. Most of them are decidedly not in the mood these days: During this authoritarian turn, the capitalist class has found that muzzling politico-intellectual freedom is a way to curry favor with the president and protect their bottom line.
The news industry is in such abysmal shape that it’s hard to envision where the Post’s more than 300 laid-off talented editors and reporters will land. For years, jobs have been vanishing in news media without new ones to replace them.
It’s now common to see journalists turn to the increasingly popular medium of paid newsletters to write in an independent and individual capacity. I appreciate it as an enterprising move, but it will not and cannot replace what is being lost.









