Will Lewis steps down as Washington Post CEO days after mass layoffs


Summary

Will Lewis resigns

Will Lewis, who was the Washington Post's CEO and publisher, resigned just days after mass layoffs and department closures were announced at the newspaper.

Washington Post layoffs

Hundreds of people at The Washington Post were laid off and departments were closed this week.

'Long overdue'

Lewis' time at the Post came with controversy and financial losses, with the Washington Post Guild saying his "exit is long overdue."


Full story

Former Washington Post chief executive officer and publisher Will Lewis resigned from his position, days after mass layoffs and department closures were announced at the newspaper.

Lewis said in a statement that he stepped down “to ensure the sustainable future of The Post,” The New York Times reported, noting that he only mentioned Jeff Bezos, the Washington Post’s owner but not its journalists.

Lewis’ tenure was marked with financial losses and controversy — the most recent of which was the laying of hundreds of people.

Now, Jeff D’Onofrio, previously the Post’s Chief Financial Officer, will take over as publisher and CEO.

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“The Post’s resolute commitment to writing the first rough draft of history anchors and imprints its future,” D’Onofrio, who’s had other roles at Raptive, Tumblr, Yahoo and Google, said in a statement. “I am honored to become part of charting that future and to take the lead in securing both the legacy and business of this fierce, storied American institution.”

In the days before Lewis’ departure, he was photographed at a Super Bowl event in San Francisco, shortly after the mass layoffs were announced. This move sparked criticism, especially as Washington Post staff members noted Lewis wasn’t present for the call announcing the workforce reduction. Instead, executive editor Matt Murray delivered the news.

Murray said during that call that the reduction was about “positioning ourselves to become more essential to people’s lives, and what is becoming a more crowded, competitive and complicated media landscape, and after some years when, candidly, the Post has had struggles to do that.”

The Post, Murray said, lost too much money over the years.

“We must work together to become nimbler, and to find new ways of working and innovating to understand what our customers want more of and what they want less of,” Murray said, noting every department will feel the effects.

Changes to The Post include the shuttering of the sports department, though it plans to retain several reporters to join featured and cover sports; the dismantling of its book section; suspension of the Post Reports podcast; as well as the slashing of its international footprint and metro section.

At the end of the day, The Post will focus more on national news, politics, business and health, Murray said.

Financial losses and controversy

Bezos hired Lewis in 2024. He began his career in Britain as a reporter, eventually becoming the chief executive officer of Dow Jones and the Wall Street Journal’s publisher.

However, NPR and other outlets reported shortly before Lewis started at The Washington Post that plaintiffs suing Rupert Murdoch’s British tabloids argued that Lewis was part of an effort to hide evidence of criminality at the papers. These civil suits accused Lewis of protecting Murdoch’s top executives.

According to NPR, Lewis pressured the outlet not to publish their story on him — and told then-WP executive editor Sally Buzzbee not to let staff report on it either. This disagreement led to her leaving the newspaper. After this, he tried to hire a British journalist, his former colleague Robert Winnett, though this was unsuccessful after questions came up about Lewis’ and Winnett’s conduct in a phone-hacking scandal.

“Will Lewis’s exit is long overdue. His legacy will be the attempted destruction of a great American journalism institution. But it’s not too late to save The Post,” the Washington Post Guild said Saturday. “Jeff Bezos must immediately rescind these layoffs or sell the paper to someone willing to invest in its future.”

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Why this story matters

The resignation of Washington Post CEO Will Lewis, coming immediately after sweeping layoffs that deeply affected the newsroom, highlights ongoing turbulence and challenges for the business and editorial direction of a major American news institution.

Leadership transition

The immediate departure of Will Lewis and the appointment of Jeff D'Onofrio as acting CEO signal a critical leadership change amid internal unrest and strategic uncertainty for the Washington Post.

Mass layoffs

The layoffs of nearly one-third of the staff, including hundreds of journalists and entire departments, raise concerns about the paper's ability to cover a broad range of news and maintain its journalistic mission.

Editorial independence and direction

Editorial decisions have prompted debate over the extent of owner Jeff Bezos' influence and the future identity of the newspaper.

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Community reaction

Many journalists and the Washington Post Guild criticized both the scale of the layoffs and the leadership's handling of the changes with protests occurring outside the newspaper’s offices and calls for owner Jeff Bezos to reverse the cuts.

Context corner

The Washington Post, historically known for investigative reporting, has faced consistent financial challenges in an evolving media landscape. The paper has seen declining subscriptions since 2024 amid shifts in editorial direction and changes in leadership under owner Jeff Bezos.

Policy impact

Changes are expected to impact coverage of local, national and international news with potential public effects due to reduced investigative reporting on governmental and societal issues.

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Certified balanced reporting

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Transparent and credible

Awarded a perfect reliability rating from NewsGuard

100/100

Welcome back to trustworthy journalism.

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Bias comparison

  • Media outlets on the left frames the publisher's departure as a consequence of "massive layoffs" that "gut the newspaper," highlighting his "controversial past" and "going AWOL" with a condemnatory tone.
  • Media outlets in the center bjectively note the departure "following mass layoffs" and "newsroom backlash," raising questions about leadership without the same emotional charge.
  • Media outlets on the right portray the situation as the "Jeff Bezos-owned" institution "imploding in epic chaos" amid an "onslaught of backlash," employing highly sensational language to discredit.

Media landscape

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Key points from the Left

  • Will Lewis has stepped down as publisher of The Washington Post following layoffs that affected about one-third of the newsroom.
  • Jeff D'Onofrio has been appointed as acting publisher and CEO of The Washington Post, taking over immediately.
  • Lewis stated, "Now is the right time for me to step aside" in a note to staff about his departure.

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Key points from the Center

  • On Saturday, Will Lewis, publisher of The Washington Post, stepped down and named CFO Jeff D'Onofrio as acting publisher and CEO effective immediately.
  • The newsroom's restructuring recently cut roughly 300 employees, eliminating the sports desk and reducing local staff from more than 40 to about a dozen.
  • Reporters said they did not see Lewis during or after Wednesday's layoffs, though he was photographed Thursday on a pre-Super Bowl red carpet and journalists appealed to Jeff Bezos in recent weeks, who did not respond.

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Key points from the Right

  • Will Lewis announced he is stepping down as publisher of The Washington Post on Feb. 7, 2026, three days after the newspaper laid off one-third of its staff, impacting over 300 employees.
  • Lewis stated in an email, "now is the right time for me to step aside" after facing backlash over the layoffs.
  • Jeff D'Onofrio, formerly the chief financial officer, was appointed as the acting publisher and CEO of The Washington Post.

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