The Washington Post
is Washington,
D.C.
's largest newspaper and
its oldest, founded in 1877. Located in the nation's
capital,
The Post has a particular emphasis on national
politics.
It is a newspaper of record and a regional
paper; D.C., Maryland
, and
Virginia
editions are
printed for daily circulation.
The newspaper is written as a
broadsheet,
with photographs printed both in color as well as in black and
white. Weekday printings include the main section, containing the
first page, national, international news, business, politics, and
editorials and opinions, followed by the sections on local news
(Metro), sports, style (feature writing on pop culture, politics,
fine and performing arts, film, fashion, and gossip), and
classifieds. The Sunday edition includes the weekday sections as
well as several weekly sections: Outlook (opinion and editorials),
Style & Arts, Travel, Comics, TV Week, and the
Washington
Post Magazine. Beyond the newspaper, the
Washington
Post operates a
syndication
service (
The
Washington Post Writers Group) and under its parent company of
The Washington Post
Company, is involved in the Washington Post Media, Washington
Post Digital, and
washingtonpost.com.
Perhaps the most notable incident in the
Post's history
was when, in the early 1970s, reporters
Bob
Woodward and
Carl Bernstein led
the American media's investigation into what became known as the
Watergate scandal. The newspaper's
reporting greatly contributed to the resignation of U.S. President
Richard Nixon.
In later years, its
investigations led to increased review of the Walter Reed Army
Medical Center
. The newspaper is also known as the namesake
of "
The Washington Post
March", the 1889
march composed by
John Phillip Sousa while he was
leading the
U.S. Marine Band; it became the
standard music to accompany the
two-step, a late 19th-century
dance craze.
Since
Leonard Downie, Jr. was
named executive editor in 1991, the
Post has won 25
Pulitzer Prizes, more than half of
the paper's total collection of
47 Pulitzers
awarded. This includes six separate Pulitzers given in
2008, the second-highest record of
Pulitzers ever given to a single newspaper in one year. The Post
has also received 18
Nieman
Fellowships, and 368
White House News
Photographers Association awards, among others.
General overview
The
Post is generally regarded among the leading daily
American newspapers, along with
The New York Times, which is known
for its general reporting and international coverage, and
The Wall Street
Journal, which is known for its
financial reporting.
The Post has
distinguished itself through its political reporting on the workings of
the White
House
, Congress, and other aspects of
the U.S.
government. Unlike the
Times and the
Journal, it does not print a daily national edition for
distribution away from the
East Coast—although a
"National Weekly Edition" combines stories from a week of
Post editions.
The majority of its newsprint readership is
in the District of
Columbia
, as well as
its suburbs in Maryland
and Northern Virginia.
The
Post is one of a few U.S. newspapers with foreign bureaus, located in Baghdad
, Beijing, Berlin
, Bogota
, Islamabad
, Jerusalem
, Johannesburg
, Kabul
, London
, Mexico City
, Moscow
, Nairobi
, New Delhi
, Paris
, and
Tokyo
. In November 2009, it announced the closure
of its U.S. regional bureaus — Chicago, Los Angeles and New York —
as part of an increased focus on "political stories and local news
coverage in Washington."
The paper has local bureaus in Maryland
(Annapolis
, Montgomery County
, Prince George's County
, Southern
Maryland) and Virginia (Alexandria
, Fairfax
, Loudoun County
, Richmond County
, and Prince William County
).
, its average weekday circulation was 582,844, according to the Audit Bureau of Circulations, making it the fifth largest newspaper in the country by circulation, behind USA Today, The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, and the Los Angeles Times. While its circulation (like that of almost all newspapers) has been slipping, it has one of the highest market-penetration rates of any metropolitan news daily.
History
The paper was founded in 1877 by
Stilson Hutchins and in 1880 added a Sunday
edition, thus becoming the city's first newspaper to publish seven
days a week. In 1889, Hutchins sold the paper to Frank Hatton, a
former Postmaster General, and Beriah Wilkins, a former Democratic
congressman from Ohio. To promote the paper, the new owners
requested the leader of the
Marine Band,
John Philip Sousa, to compose a
march for the newspaper's essay contest awards ceremony. Sousa
composed
The Washington
Post, which remains one of his best-known works. In 1899,
during the
Spanish–American
War, the
Post printed
Clifford K. Berryman's classic illustration
Remember the
Maine.
Wilkins acquired Hatton's share of the paper in 1894 at Hatton's
death. After Wilkins' death in 1903, his sons John and Robert ran
the
Post for two years before selling it in 1905 to
Washington McLean and his son
John Roll McLean, owners of the
Cincinnati Enquirer.
During the
Wilson presidency, the
Post was credited with having made the
most famous newspaper
typo in D.C. history according to
Reason Magazine; the Post tried to report
that President Wilson had been
entertaining his
future-wife Mrs. Galt, but instead wrote, erroneously, that he had
been
entering Mrs. Galt. When John McLean died in 1916, he
put the paper in trust, having little faith that his playboy son
Edward "Ned" McLean could manage
his inheritance. Ned went to court and broke the trust, but, under
his management, the paper slumped toward ruin. It was purchased in
a bankruptcy auction in 1933 by a member of the
Federal Reserve's board of governors,
Eugene Meyer, who restored the paper's
health and reputation. In 1946, Meyer was succeeded as publisher by
his son-in-law
Philip Graham.
In 1954, the
Post consolidated its position by acquiring
and merging with its last morning rival, the
Washington Times-Herald. (The
combined paper would officially be named
The Washington
Post and Times-Herald until 1973, although the
Times-Herald portion of the masthead became less and less
prominent after the 1950s.) The merger left the
Post with
two remaining local competitors, the afternoon
Washington Star (
Evening Star)
and
The Washington Daily
News, which merged in 1972 and folded in 1981.
The Washington Times,
established in 1982, has been a local rival with a circulation ( )
about one-seventh that of the
Post.
After Graham's death in 1963, control of the Washington Post
Company passed to
Katharine Graham,
his wife and Meyer's daughter. No woman before had ever run a
nationally prominent newspaper in the United States. She described
her own anxiety and lack of confidence based on her gender in her
autobiography, and she did not assign duties to her daughter at the
paper as she did to her son. She served as publisher from 1969 to
1979 and headed the Washington Post Company into the early 1990s as
chairman of the board and CEO. After 1993, she retained a position
as chairman of the executive committee until her death in
2001.
Her tenure is credited with seeing the Post rise in national
stature through effective investigative reporting, most notably to
ensure that
The New York Times did not surpass its
Washington reporting of the
Pentagon
Papers and Watergate scandal.
Executive editor Ben Bradlee put the paper's reputation and
resources behind reporters Bob Woodward
and Carl Bernstein, who, in a long
series of articles, chipped away at the story behind the 1972
burglary of Democratic
National Committee offices in the Watergate Hotel
complex in Washington. The Post's dogged
coverage of the story, the outcome of which ultimately played a
major role in the resignation of President Richard Nixon, won the
paper a
Pulitzer Prize in 1973.
In 1972, the "Book World" section was introduced. It featured
Pulitzer Prize winning critics such as
Jonathan Yardley and
Michael Dirda, the later established his
career as a critic at the Post. In 2009, after 37 years, "Book
World" as a standalone insert was discontinued, the last issue
being Sunday, February 15, 2009. However book reviews were still
being published in the Outlook section on Sundays, and in the Style
section the rest of the week, as well as some reviews posted
online.
In 1980, the
Post published a dramatic story called
"Jimmy's World", describing the life of an eight-year-old
heroin addict in Washington, for which reporter
Janet Cooke won acclaim and a
Pulitzer Prize. Subsequent investigation,
however, revealed the story to be a fabrication. The Pulitzer Prize
was returned.
Donald Graham, Katharine's son,
succeeded her as publisher in 1979 and in the early 1990s became
chief executive officer and chairman of the board, as well. He was
succeeded in 2000 as publisher and CEO by
Boisfeuillet Jones, Jr., with Graham
remaining as chairman. In February 2008, Jones was named chairman
of the newspaper, and Katharine Weymouth became publisher of
The Washington Post and chief executive officer of
Washington Post Media, a new unit that includes
The Washington
Post and washingtonpost.com.
Like
The New York Times, the
Post was slow in
moving to color photographs and features. On January 28, 1999, its
first color front-page photograph appeared. After that, color
slowly integrated itself into other photographs and advertising
throughout the paper.
In 1996, the newspaper established a web site,
http://www.washingtonpost.com/.
The paper is part of
The
Washington Post Company, a diversified education and media
company that also owns educational services provider
Kaplan, Inc.,
Post-Newsweek Stations,
Cable One,
Washingtonpost.Newsweek
Interactive,
Newsweek
magazine, the online magazine
Slate, The Gazette and Southern
Maryland Newspapers, The Herald (Everett, WA) and
CourseAdvisor.
The paper runs its own
syndication
service for its columnists and cartoonists,
The Washington Post Writers
Group.
The
Post has its main office at 1150 15th St, N.W., and
the newspaper has the exclusive
zip code
20071.
On July 7, 2008, it was announced that former
Wall Street Journal editor
Marcus Brauchli would become the paper's top
editor, succeeding
Leonard Downie,
Jr. in September.
On January 29, 2009, the
Post announced that it was
dropping Book World as a separate Sunday section and moving its
coverage to the Outlook and Style sections. Deputy editor Rachel
Hartigan Shea was named the new Book World editor, replacing
Marie Arana, who stepped down on
December 31, 2008 after accepting an early retirement offer earlier
that year.
Political stance
Beginning with
Richard Nixon,
conservatives have often cited the
Post, along with
The New York Times, as
exemplars of "
liberal media
bias".
Originally due to the perceived left-wing bias in both reporting
and editorials,
The Washington Post has been called
"Pravda on the Potomac", an allusion to
the
official newspaper of the
Soviet communist party.
Since then, the appellation has been used by both liberal and
conservative critics of the
Post. FBI director
J. Edgar
Hoover reportedly told President
Lyndon B. Johnson, "I don't have much influence with
the
Post because I frankly don't read it. Iview it like
the
Daily Worker."
As Katharine Graham (the former publisher of the
Post)
noted in her memoirs
Personal History, the paper long had
a policy of not making endorsements for presidential candidates.
However, since at least 2000,
The Washington Post has
endorsed presidential candidates. It also has endorsed Republican
politicians, such as Maryland Governor
Robert Ehrlich. In 2006, it repeated its
historic endorsements of every Republican incumbent for Congress in
Northern Virginia. There have also been times when the
Post has specifically chosen not to endorse any candidate,
such as in 1988 when it refused to endorse then Governor
Michael Dukakis or then Vice President
George H.W. Bush. On October 17, 2008, the
Post endorsed
Barack Obama for
President of the United
States.
Despite its liberal reputation, the Post's editorial positions on
foreign policy and economic issues have seen a definitively
conservative bent: it has steadfastly supported the 2003 invasion
of Iraq, warmed to President
George
W. Bush's proposal to partially
privatize
Social
Security, opposed a deadline for U.S. withdrawal from the
Iraq War, and advocated
free trade agreements, including
CAFTA.
In
"Buying the War" on PBS, Bill Moyers noted 27
editorials supporting
George W.
Bush's ambitions to invade Iraq.
National security correspondent
Walter
Pincus reported that he had been ordered to cease his reports
that were critical of Republican administrations.
In 1992, the
PBS investigative news program
Frontline
suggested that the
Post had moved to the right in response
to its smaller, more conservative rival
The Washington Times. The program
quoted Paul Weyrich, one of the founders of the conservative
activist organization the
Moral
Majority, as saying "
The Washington Post became very
arrogant and they just decided that they would determine what was
news and what wasn't news and they wouldn't cover a lot of things
that went on. And
The Washington Times has forced the
Post to cover a lot of things that they wouldn't cover if
the
Times wasn't in existence." In 2008, Thomas F. Roeser
of the
Chicago Daily Observer also mentioned competition
from the
Washington Times as a factor moving the
Post to the right.
On March 26, 2007,
Chris Matthews
said on his television program, "Well,
The Washington Post
is not the liberal newspaper it was, Congressman, let me tell you.
I have been reading it for years and it is a
neocon newspaper". It has regularly
published an ideological mixture of op-ed columnists, some of them
on the left (including
E.J. Dionne and
Eugene Robinson), and some on
the right (including
George Will,
Michael Gerson, and
Charles Krauthammer).
In a November 19, 2008 column,
Washington Post ombudsman Deborah
Howell stated: "I'll bet that most Post journalists voted for
Obama. I did. There are centrists at The Post as well. But the
conservatives I know here feel so outnumbered that they don't even
want to be quoted by name in a memo". Responding to criticism of
the newspaper's coverage during the run-up to the 2008 presidential
election, Howell wrote: "The opinion pages have strong conservative
voices; the editorial board includes centrists and conservatives;
and there were editorials critical of Obama. Yet opinion was still
weighted toward Obama. It's not hard to see why conservatives feel
disrespected".
In November 2007, the
Post was criticized by independent
journalist
Robert Parry for reporting
on anti-Obama chain e-mails without sufficiently emphasizing to its
readers the false nature of the anonymous claims. In 2009, Parry
criticized the
Post for its allegedly unfair reporting on
liberal politicians, including Vice President
Al
Gore and President
Barack
Obama.
In an June 2009 article on the conservative website
newsmax.com, journalist
Ronald Kessler reported that "... recent
developments at the Washington Post demonstrate that a return to
fair coverage attracts readers," and that, "Since Katharine
Weymouth became publisher more than a year ago, and she named
Marcus Brauchli, a former Wall Street Journal editor, executive
editor in September, the paper has been making an honest effort to
be fair. Hit jobs against Bush administration programs and
Republicans in general have virtually vanished. Instead, the paper
presents issues fairly. No longer is the other side suppressed or
relegated to the last paragraph."
The Wasington Post also
frequently attacked Republican
Bob
McDonnell during the
Virginia gubernatorial
election, 2009. The
Politico noted the
rather unbalanced coverage of the Virginia Governor race, writing
that the newspaper was "quickly becoming the biggest ally of
Virginia Democratic gubernatorial candidate
Creigh Deeds, front-paging another story today
that portrays Republican Bob McDonnell in a negative light as a
rock-ribbed social conservative".
Notable contributors (past and present)
- Joel Achenbach (writer)
- Anne Applebaum (writer, Pulitzer Prize)
- Marie Arana (editor of Book
World)
- Cathy Areu (contributing editor,
"First Person Singular")
- Peter Baker (White House
reporter)
- Dan Balz (national political
reporter)
- Rankin Barbee (writer)
- Carl Bernstein (writer, Pulitzer
Prize)
- Andrew Beyer (horse racing
columnist)
- Herb Block (cartoonist,
Pulitzer Prize)
- Thomas Boswell (sports
columnist)
- David Broder (writer, Pulitzer
Prize)
- Tina Brown (writer)
- Art Buchwald (writer, Pulitzer
Prize)
- Monty Bush (writer)
- Ron Charles (book critic)
- Rajiv Chandrasekaran
(editor)
- Chris Cillizza (writer; author of
The Fix weblog)
- Libby Copeland (writer)
- Richard L. Coe (theatre critic/writer)
- Richard
Cohen (columnist)
- Steve Coll (editor, Pulitzer
Prize)
- Janet Cooke (writer, Pulitzer
Prize)
- Lisa de Moraes (television
columnist)
- Ann Devroy (award winning
journalist)
- Helen Dewar (Senate political
reporter)
- E.J. Dionne (columnist)
- Michael Dirda (book critic,
Pulitzer Prize)
- Leonard Downie, Jr.
(editor)
- Michel duCille (photo editor,
photographer, Pulitzer Prize)
- Bill Elsen (director of recruiting
and hiring)
- David Finkel, (journalist, Pulitzer
Prize)
- Marc Fisher, (writer, editor)
- Dan Froomkin (columnist)
- Joel Garreau (writer)
- Barbara Garson (writer)
- Philip Geyelin (editorial page
editor)
- Robin Givhan (fashion editor,
Pulitzer Prize)
- Malcolm Gladwell (writer)
- Meg Greenfield (editor, Pulitzer
Prize)
- Mike Grunwald (writer)
- Walter Haight (sports writer and
columnist)
- Jim Hoagland (writer, Pulitzer
Prize)
- Stephen Hunter (film critic,
Pulitzer Prize)
- Robert Kagan (columnist)
- Glenn Kessler
(writer, Pulitzer Prize)
- Colbert I. King (writer, Pulitzer Prize)
- Anne Kornblut (writer)
- Tony Kornheiser (sports
columnist)
- Charles Krauthammer
(columnist, Pulitzer Prize)
- Howard Kurtz (media critic)
- Charles Lane
(writer)
- Colman McCarthy (columnist)
- Mary McGrory (writer, Pulitzer
Prize)
- Dana Milbank (writer)
- Tim Page (music critic,
Pulitzer Prize)
- Philip P. Pan (writer, author)
- Matthew Parris (columnist)
- John Pomfret (writer
and editor, author)
- Shirley Povich (sports
columnist)
- Dana Priest (writer, Pulitzer
Prize)
- William Raspberry (writer,
Pulitzer Prize)
- Thomas E. Ricks (military reporter,
Pulitzer Prize)
- Ken Ringle (writer)
- Eugene Robinson
(columnist and editor, Pulitzer Prize)
- Harry M. Rosenfeld (editor)
- Christine Sadler (writer and
editor)
- Anthony Shadid (writer, Pulitzer
Prize)
- Tom Shales (writer, Pulitzer
Prize)
- Howard Simons (editor)
- Leonard Shapiro (sports
columnist)
- Michael Specter (writer)
- Emil Steiner (writer)
- Barry Svrluga (sports writer)
- Patrick Tyler (writer)
- Tom Toles (cartoonist, Pulitzer
Prize)
- Jim VandeHei (writer)
- Gene Weingarten (writer,
Pulitzer Prize)
- James Russell Wiggins
(editor)
- Michael Wilbon (sports
columnist)
- Juan Williams (Writer)
- George F. Will (columnist, Pulitzer Prize)
- Bob Woodward (writer, Pulitzer
Prize)
- Robin Wright
(writer)
- Jonathan Yardley (book critic,
Pulitzer Prize)
- Steve LeVine (journalist and
writer)
Executive officers and editors (past and present)
Honors and achievements
References
- Worden, Nat (November 2, 2006). Learning Curve at Washington Post.
RealMoney.com.
- 1889 from the paper's corporate history
- John Philip Sousa Collection from the website
of the University of
Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
- Book World 25th Anniversary: Views From
Publisher's Row, Marie Arana-Ward (then-deputy editor of
"Book World"), The Washington Post, June 1, 1997
- Letter from the editor, The Washington
post, Sunday, February 15, 2009; Page BW02
- Bruce
Bartlett, Partisan Press Parity?, The Washington
Times, March 13, 2007.
- James
Kirchick, Pravda on the Potomac, The New
Republic, February 18, 2009.
- William
Greider, 'Washington Post' Warriors, The Nation, March 6,
2003.
- Michael Beschloss, Taking Charge: The Johnson White House Tapes,
1963-1964, p. 32, Simon & Schuster, 1997, ISBN
0684804077.
- Taylor
Branch, Pillar of Fire: America in the King Years,
1963-1965, p. 180, Simon & Schuster, 1999, ISBN
0684848090.
- How the Liberal Media Stonewalled the Edwards
Chicago Daily Observer August 18, 2008
- Howell, Deborah: "Remedying the Bias Perception",
WashingtonPost.com, November 19, 2008
- Framing Obama - by the WPost, Robert Parry, Consortium
News, March 19, 2009
- Kessler, Ronald: Washington Post Has Become a Model for the
Media, Newsmax.com, 01 June 2009
External links