TheĀ WashingtonĀ PostĀ laid off one-third of its staff Wednesday, eliminating its sports section, several foreign bureaus and its books coverage in a widespread purge that represented a brutalĀ blow to journalismĀ and one of its most legendary brands.
The Postās executive editor, Matt Murray, called the move painful but necessary to put the outlet on stronger footing and to weather changes in technology and user habits. āWe canāt be everything to everyone,ā Murray said in a note to staff members.
He outlined the changes in a companywide online meeting, and staff members then began getting emails with one of two subject lines ā telling them their role was or was not eliminated.
RumorsĀ of layoffsĀ had circulated for weeks, ever since word leaked that sports reporters who had expected to travel to Italy forĀ the Winter OlympicsĀ would not be going. But when official word came down, the size and scale of the cuts were shocking, affecting virtually every department in the newsroom.
āItās just devastating news for anyone who cares about journalism in America and, in fact, the world,ā said Margaret Sullivan, a Columbia University journalism professor and former media columnist at theĀ PostĀ and The New York Times.
āTheĀ WashingtonĀ PostĀ has been so important in so many ways, in news coverage, sports and cultural coverage.ā
Martin Baron, the Postās first editor under its current owner,Ā billionaire Jeff Bezos, condemned his former boss and called what has happened at the newspaper āa case study in near-instant, self-inflicted brand destruction.ā
Journalists pleaded with Bezos for help
Bezos, who has been silent in recent weeks amid pleas fromĀ PostĀ journalists to step in and prevent the cutbacks, had no immediate comment.
The newspaper has been bleeding subscribers in part due to decisions made by Bezos, includingĀ pulling back from an endorsementĀ of Kamala Harris, a Democrat, during the 2024 presidential election against Donald Trump, a Republican, and directingĀ a more conservative turnĀ onĀ liberal opinion pages.

A private company, theĀ PostĀ does not reveal how many subscribers it has, but it is believed to be roughly 2 million.
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TheĀ PostĀ would also not say how many people it has on staff, making it impossible to estimate how many people were laid off Wednesday. TheĀ PostĀ also did not outline its finances.
The Postās troubles stand in contrast to its longtime competitor The New York Times, which has been thriving in recent years, in large part due to investments in ancillary products such as games and its Wirecutter product recommendations. The Times hasĀ doubled its staffĀ over the past decade.
Eliminating the sports section puts an end to a department that has hosted many well-known bylines through the years, among them John Feinstein, Michael Wilbon, Shirley Povich, Sally Jenkins and Tony Kornheiser. The Times has also largely ended its sports section, but it has replaced the coverage by buying The Athletic and incorporating its work into the Times website.
The Postās Book World, a destination for book reviews, literary news and author interviews, has been a dedicated section in its Sunday paper.
A half-century ago, the Postās coverage of Watergate, led by intrepid reporters Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, entered the history books. The Style section under longtime Executive Editor Ben Bradlee hosted some of the countryās best feature writing.
All Mideast correspondents and editors laid off
Word of specific cuts drifted out during the day, as when Cairo Bureau Chief Claire Parker announced on X that she had been laid off, along with all of the newspaperās Middle East correspondents and editors. āHard to understand the logic,ā she wrote.
Lizzie Johnson, who wrote last week about covering a war zone in Ukraine without power, heat or running water, said she had been laid off, too.
The paperās Ukraine bureau chief Siobhan OāGrady said it was āthe honor of my lifeā to serve in the position, suggesting she too had been let go.
Anger and sadness spread across the journalism world.
āTheĀ PostĀ has survived for nearly 150 years, evolving from a hometown family newspaper into an indispensable national institution, and a pillar of the democratic system,ā Ashley Parker, a formerĀ PostĀ journalist, wrote in an essay in The Atlantic. But if the paperās leadership continues its current path, āit may not survive much longer.ā
Fearing for the future, Parker was among the staff members who left the newspaper for other jobs in recent months.
Atlanta paper also makes cuts
Also on Wednesday, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, which stopped print editions and went all-digital at the end of last year, announced that it was cutting 50 positions, or roughly 15% of its staff. Half of the eliminated jobs were in the newsroom.
Murray said theĀ PostĀ would concentrate on areas that demonstrate authority, distinctiveness and impact, and resonate with readers, including politics, national affairs and security. Even during its recent troubles, theĀ PostĀ has beenĀ notably aggressiveĀ inĀ coverage of Trumpās changesĀ to the federal workforce.
The companyās structure is rooted in a different era, when theĀ PostĀ was a dominant print product, Murray said in his note to the staff. In areas such as video, the outlet hasnāt kept up with consumer habits, he said.
āSignificantly, our daily story output has substantially fallen in the last five years,ā he said. āAnd even as we produce much excellent work, we too often write from one perspective, for one slice of the audience.ā
While there are business areas that need to be addressed, Baron pointed a finger of blame at Bezos ā for a āgutlessā order to kill a presidential endorsement and for remaking an editorial page that stands out only for āmoral infirmityā and āsickeningā efforts to curry favor with Trump.
āLoyal readers, livid as they saw owner Jeff Bezos betraying the values he was supposed to uphold, fled TheĀ Post,ā Baron wrote. āIn truth, they were driven away, by the hundreds of thousands.ā
Baron said he was grateful for Bezosā support when he was editor, noting that the Amazon founder came under brutal pressure from Trump during the presidentās first term.
āHe spoke forcefully and eloquently of a free press and The Postās mission, demonstrating his commitment in concrete terms,ā Baron wrote. āHe often declared that The Postās success would be among the proudest achievements of his life. I wish I detected the same spirit today. There is no sign of it.ā