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OAN Staff Cory Hawkins
6:44 PM – Wednesday, February 4, 2026
The Washington Post (WaPo) announced a sweeping wave of layoffs on Wednesday, cutting at least one-third of its total workforce. The move essentially decimates a newsroom that previously housed 800 to 1,000 employees, resulting in the departure of more than 300 journalists.
The restructuring began with the total dissolution of the sports desk, where 45 staff members were either laid off or reassigned.
International coverage suffered a similar fate. The outlet shuttered several foreign bureaus, eliminated correspondent roles for Asia, China, and Iran, and disbanded its Middle East team. Domestically, the books department was also shuttered entirely, and the metro desk saw deep cuts to its D.C.-based reporting and editing staff.
Additionally, the cuts signal a retreat from multimedia and visual journalism, as the WaPo has since dissolved its entire photography department — leaving it without in-house visual staff — while suspending its flagship podcast “Post Reports.”
The delivery of the news was as cold as the cuts themselves. Staffers were notified via email to “stay home today” and join an 8:30 a.m. Zoom call regarding “significant actions” across the company. As employees pleaded for their livelihoods, owner Jeff Bezos remained silent.
During the morning call, editor-in-chief Matt Murray told the journalists that the WaPo was undergoing a “strategic reset” to better position the publication for the future, according to employees who were on the call.
“Today, the Washington Post is taking a number of actions across the company to secure our future,” Murray said, according to an audio recording of the meeting.
“We all recognize the actions we are taking today will be painful – most of all, of course, for those of you who are directly affected, but for everybody,” Murray told employees on the call. “I know that the reset is going to feel like a shock to the system and raise some questions for everybody.”
Murray noted that the outlet had struggled to reach enough “customers” and spoke about competing in a crowded media marketplace. The news outlet, which famously reported its Watergate coverage that led to then-President Richard Nixon’s resignation in 1974, has been owned since 2013 by Bezos.
Despite Bezos’ personal net worth of $260 billion — as tracked by the Bloomberg Billionaires Index — his wealth did not shield the outlet from the historic cuts.
These latest layoffs also follow a 4% staff reduction from a year ago. While that previous round largely spared the newsroom, the current restructuring strikes at the very heart of the paper’s editorial operation.
In a statement following the announcement, the Washington Post Guild — which represents hundreds of newsroom employees — noted that these cuts are part of a compounding trend. According to the union, the paper’s total workforce has been slashed by approximately 400 people over the last few years through a relentless cycle of buyouts, attrition, and layoffs.
Former executive editor Marty Baron said the announcement “ranks among the darkest days in the history of one of the world’s greatest news organizations.”
“The Post wasn’t the same paper that had recruited me,” wrote Ashley Parker, a former WaPo journalist. Parker left in 2024, stating she did not want to work for “an owner and publisher who couldn’t articulate a vision and confused contempt for the newsroom with a business plan.”
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