POLITICS: Washington Post Removes Senior Politics Editor After Trump Win

Politics: Washington Post Removes Senior Politics Editor After Trump Win

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The Washington Post is making another big change.

Dan Eggen, the senior politics editor, has been removed from his position.

The New York Post reported:

The Washington Post abruptly removed its politics editor without giving him a reason for the decision, he claimed — the latest shakeup at the left-leaning paper owned by Amazon founder Jeff Bezos.

Dan Eggen, a veteran political writer who was named senior politics editor just two years ago, said he was “crushed” after being informed he will be “removed” from his role, according to an email he sent that was obtained by Lachlan Cartwright.

“I struggled with how to write this message since there is an element of begging to it that is not particularly attractive. But what the hey: I was informed Monday that I will be removed as senior politics editor at the end of the year. I will leave it to others to explain why,” the email said.

A WaPo spokesperson said they don’t comment on personnel decisions when contacted by the New York Post on Thursday.

The Washington Post is on track to lose $77 million this year.

Fox News reported:

The Washington Post was already in financial trouble even before the recent boycott movement that erupted against the paper.

A report from New York Magazine’s Intelligencer shed light on a recent meeting at The Post newsroom where the top brass revealed that the paper was on pace to lose a whopping $77 million this year, a figure that does not even include the staggering 250,000 subscribers it lost over its last-minute decision by billionaire owner Jeff Bezos to not endorse Vice President Kamala Harris in the final days of the presidential race.

“[It’s] not a surprise at all,” one Post staffer told Fox News Digital in reaction to the report. “It means ‘buckle up.’”

Notably, the $77 million in reported losses mirrors the exact figure Washington Post publisher Will Lewis said in May the paper lost over the prior year.



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