The Washington Post lost 200K subscribers after dumping their Harris endorsement

As we discussed over the weekend, Jeff Bezos and WaPo CEO Will Lewis ordered the Washington Post to dump their planned endorsement of Kamala Harris. Will Lewis fell on his sword and publicly claimed that he was the decision-maker in this situation, and he felt like the hometown paper of America’s capital city should not endorse any presidential candidate, not even when Kamala Harris’s opponent incited a violent insurrection and tried to overthrow the federal government IN Washington, DC. I don’t buy that Will Lewis made this decision on his own, especially because editor Robert Kagan, who quit WaPo last Friday because of the endorsement situation, claims that Bezos had a backroom deal with Donald Trump. As in, kill the WaPo endorsement of VP Harris and the quid pro quo is that Trump would meet with Blue Origin people and presumably make promises for government contracts. Ever since the news came out last Friday, people have been canceling their WaPo subscriptions en masse. So much so that it’s become one of the biggest media stories of the month:

The Washington Post has been rocked by a tidal wave of cancellations from digital subscribers and a series of resignations from columnists, as the paper grapples with the fallout of owner Jeff Bezos’s decision to block an endorsement of Vice President Kamala Harris for president.

More than 200,000 people had canceled their digital subscriptions by midday Monday, according to two people at the paper with knowledge of internal matters. Not all cancellations take effect immediately. Still, the figure represents about 8% of the paper’s paid circulation of 2.5 million subscribers, which includes print as well. The number of cancellations continued to grow Monday afternoon.

A corporate spokesperson declined to comment, citing The Washington Post Co.’s status as a privately held company.

“It’s a colossal number,” former Post Executive Editor Marcus Brauchli told NPR. “The problem is, people don’t know why the decision was made. We basically know the decision was made but we don’t know what led to it.”

Chief Executive and Publisher Will Lewis explained the decision not to endorse in this year’s presidential race or in future elections as a return to the Post’s roots: It has for years styled itself an “independent paper.”

Few people inside the paper credit that rationale given the timing, however, just days before a neck-and-neck race between Harris and former President Donald Trump.

Former Executive Editor Marty Baron voiced that skepticism in an interview with NPR’s Morning Edition on Monday.

“If this decision had been made three years ago, two years ago, maybe even a year ago, that would’ve been fine,” Baron said. “It’s a certainly reasonable decision. But this was made within a couple of weeks of the election, and there was no substantive serious deliberation with the editorial board of the paper. It was clearly made for other reasons, not for reasons of high principle.”

Post reporters have revealed repeated instances of wrongdoing and allegations of illegality by Trump and his associates. The editorial page, which operates separately, has characterized Trump as a threat to the American democratic experiment. Several Post journalists say their relatives are among those canceling subscriptions.

[From NPR]

NPR also notes that Will Lewis touted a rise in subscriptions by 4,000 earlier this year, because that’s the state of media these days – 4,000 new subscriptions in an election year was considered big news. I’d say that 200,000 canceled subscriptions is even bigger news. As much as journalists are pearl-clutching over the canceled subscriptions, even they have to admit that legacy media has basically zero credibility at this point. It’s been nine years of Trump and the MAGA cult. Nine years of the media sanewashing Trump and minimizing his words and behavior. Nine years of these same journalists holding Democrats to a wildly different standard than an adjudicated rapist, felon and ultra-nationalist racist. Legacy media got so much support in the first years of the Trump presidency but they’ve utterly squandered that goodwill. F–k the Post, f–k the LA Times and f–k USA Today. Speaking of – USA Today has also declined to endorse this year, after endorsing Joe Biden in 2020 (which was their first presidential endorsement in decades). That means the NY Times endorsement of Harris was the only national newspaper endorsement.

PS… I wrote this before Bezos’ WaPo column came out, so I’m covering that piece separately.

Photos courtesy of Avalon Red.

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92 Responses to “The Washington Post lost 200K subscribers after dumping their Harris endorsement”

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  1. Alex Can says:

    And yet, progressive people will continue to buy from Amazon. Just like they can’t bring themselves to quit Twitter. Democracy isn’t worth the inconvenience.

    • North of Boston says:

      Says who?

      This pro-democracy person cancelled her Prime membership and I won’t be buying from Amazon or Whole Foods.

      Just like I have never since purchased Goya products or from that MyPillow guy or from Wayfair after their profiting from/support of Trump’s inhumane/anti-democratic moves came out.

      • Josephine says:

        Same, although Alex Can is correct that many more will not quit Amazon. We enjoyed Amazon during Covid as many did, but left because we wanted to keep our dollars local and because it made it too easy to over-consume.

      • Friendly Crow says:

        Wait. What happened with wayfair??? Off to delete my account and the app I guess.

        And – yes. It’s hard for some people. I live in a very rural area where Amazon is one of the only places that delivers regularly and somewhat on time. That said – I’m gonna just get a P.O. Box in town and use that.

        I can pay for shipping if it means saying no to fascism.

      • North of Boston says:

        Wayfair profited off of selling furniture for Trump’s detention centers for the children of immigrants at the border
        (when Trump’s actions caused the separation of many children from their parents, with awful record keeping … some have never been reunited many still bear the emotional scars … it was cruelty for cruelty’s sake … much like many of his policies)

        https://www.bbc.com/news/business-48772589

        https://www.nytimes.com/2024/10/28/us/migrant-children-border-trump.html

      • MelodyM says:

        I stopped buying Goya products as well. We do order from Amazon on occasion..but only do a free month of Prime when it’s time for the next season of Good Omens. I was a long time customer of Whole Foods before Bezos bought it. But these days I go to Super HMart for amazing fruits and vegetables among other things.

      • Clove says:

        Same here!

    • Ann says:

      I agree with you, and I say that as someone who has been boycotting Amazon for years. People don’t care about stuff like this. Some of us do, but we’re absolutely a minority in the commerce world. I’m still keeping up my boycotts, but I can’t lie and say it’s not discouraging to see people continue with their mindless consumerism when deplorable stuff like this happens. Bezos is scum.

      • CL says:

        I cancelled my subscription to WaPo earlier this year, and cancelled my Amazon Prime last week. I’ve been moving away from Amazon in the last year. I’m sure I’m not the only one!

    • Shoshone says:

      I quit StarLink. F****k Elon Musk. I currently have no WiFi on my rural farm. ( fortunately I do have good cell service)

    • MinnieMouse says:

      I have avoided Amazon for years and years, and even though it’s my default, it’s actually kind of hard. They’ve swallowed so many industries and quietly buy out competitors (losing AbeBooks to them was a heartbreaker), so sometimes you don’t even know you are using Amazon. With Bed Bath and Beyond shuttering doors, it’s even harder to find the random little household things without using them. I still figure it out, but so many people will make an effort and then give up as soon as they hit the first roadblock

      • schmootc says:

        I ordered an air purifier direct from the company to try and avoid Amazon, but it showed up in an Amazon box. Very irritating. I’ve had Prime off and on since the pandemic, but have been working on ordering less from them overall. Will be making a greater effort now. Books are what kills me – they’re so much cheaper. It’s a terrible habit though.

    • HaHa says:

      Don’t make assumptions. My childless cat lady arse cancelled my Prime subscription and I deleted the Amazon app. When the survey asked why I told them it was because of this issue. When asked what it would take to get me to sign back up again I said only if JB donates $100 million to LGBTQ charities and when asked if I had anything else to say and I also added “F&ck Jeff Bezos!”

    • Flowerlake says:

      Never bought from Amazon.

      Am happy to see more people are stopping or never started in the first place.

    • Luna says:

      A lot of people are committing to not buy from Amazon or to at least buy a lot less. People are finding alternatives and I’m sure before you know it will have news columns and blogs with lists like I’ve been seeing in comments. Don’t forget to cancel Audible. Many libraries have essentially the same catalog through the Libby and Hoopla apps.

    • Not ME!!! I’d rather buy directly than put $$$ in Bezos pocket!!!

    • Zola says:

      Jeff Bezos owns less than 9% share of Amazon. It’s still worth a lot but people seem to think he owns most of the company. It’s like when Jay Z owned less than 1% stake in the Brooklyn nets and the media kept calling him the “owner”. I’m more inclined to keep supporting Amazon and its factory workers etc. who would be affected by subscription cancellation than WaPo.. he is the sole owner for WaPo. Cancelling subscriptions for WaPo will be more effective.

  2. Abby says:

    I’m a journalist (for magazines) and I’ve watched the demise of newspapers at the expense of journalism as a career. I’m watching magazines go through a shift too.

    200,000 is an incredible amount of subscribers and that makes me sad. I hope every one of those cancellations went out and voted for Harris though.

    I agree that canceling Amazon would be more meaningful. Yet also MUCH harder to disentangle from life. Just sitting here thinking about the ways Amazon has integrated in my life (everything from Alexa to Kindle to media to getting halloween costumes for my kids), it would be a real challenge to cancel Prime and using Amazon. What a chokehold one company has on many of us!

    • Josephine says:

      Abby, you make a good point about not everyone having the luxury of quitting Amazon. It really depends on what your local resources look like.

    • Mairzy Doats says:

      Amazon is entangled in our lives in even more ways than the visible Amazon Prime. Less visible is AWS cloud services, which provides MORE profit to Amazon than Amazon Prime. AWS is everywhere — not just Netflix and other streaming services but other businesses, large and small, and whatever time you’ve spent on the internet this morning you’ve probably unknowingly been on an AWS site. And since the stock is the third largest in the S&P500, after Apple and Microsoft, many index funds, retirement funds, etc. include AMZN in their portfolios. Bezos owns “only” 9% of the stock. WaPo is 100% privately owned by Bezos, so a boycott has a more direct effect.

    • Friendly Crow says:

      Amazon is dang near a monopoly at this point.

      I didn’t want to use Amazon. I went out and ran the errands needed for my child’s birthday and their party.

      I was gone for well over 6 hours. I had planned everything out before hand. Which was the most efficient path to take and which stores had the most items so I could make fewer stops.

      My entire Saturday was spent running errands and not with my family. When I could have gotten all the same from Amazon in half an hour. It was exhausting and demoralizing. But I just needed a new plan.

      I now buy things in bulk when I do errands for one thing – like I try to buy all the wrapping paper at once that we will use all year. But that’s also expensive and feels really hard to defend. You go out and spend $$$ and come back with things for the whole year and not a lot to actually show. If that makes sense.

      • Cate says:

        I have never had prime and try to avoid Amazon generally. It is kind of a PITA at times but also, Amazon is not necessarily the money saver people think it is. E.g. last summer I needed a garden trowel. I could get one for $25 on Amazon or a similar quality one at the local hardware store for $15. I’ve learned that for a lot of smaller value items like that Amazon may be convenient but it’s not a good deal.

        Sometimes not having prime/avoiding Amazon also just means doing things differently, either planning more in advance or foregoing certain items. E.g. for a birthday party, I will figure out what we need a month or more our and then it’s easier to either integrate the shopping into my usual errands or figure out an alternative. My local buy nothing group is often a great source for things like party decor!

      • Cate, You’re Wonderful 💕💕💕💕💕

      • Lurker25 says:

        Amazon IS a monopoly. And not just in one sector. It’s business practices flout FTC regulations from unfair trade practices to gobbling up competitors to deceptive advertising to illegal bundling to .. It just goes on l.

        But it’s gamed the system as a “tech” company and gotten away with it for decades.

        Until Lina Khan, FTC chair (and the biggest badass EVER) came along. Trump may have to promised Blue Origin funding or a contract or whatever, but even if that’s not the case, Bezos (along with every single other billionaire businessman in the US) had no doubt watched with to horror as Lina Khan shot down one unethical or fraudulent business after another like a mvtherfvcking sniper. (Notice how asthma inhalers went from $200-$400 each to $30/each? That’s 100% her work )

        I’ve heard of donors telling Kamala they will donate their usual $$$$ only if she fires Lina if she becomes president. I’m obviously voting for her but how she manages Lina Khan will tell me where her true loyalties lie.

    • ravensdaughter says:

      Thank you, Abby. We all appreciate the journalist perspective. It’s got to be tough to make a living in journalism these days, and what happened at the Post is impacting people like you much more than it’s impacting Jeff Bezos.

      The Post renewed my subscription for the year back in August, an annoying thing they do. Now I am even more annoyed because I have until August to cancel my subscription or they charge me more money!!

      But yes, the way Bezos made most of his money-and continues to make his money via share sales-is through Amazon.

      I, too, am Amazon dependent. The convenience is so seductive, but it comes at a price, and that price is obvious now.

      There’s fascism and there’s a specific subset of fascism, the de facto control of governments by corporations (run by oligarchs, but anyway). Even if we set aside Trump-oh, if only we could do that!-we don’t want government by corporation.

      So, on my support democracy! plate is disengaging from the Amazon mother ship now…

      • ravensdaughter says:

        Prime no biggie! Done!

        The big loss for me is Amazon Music-I have about 500 songs on my account playlists-but I will switch to another subscription service, probably Spotify. A hassle to redo my playlists, but it’s worth it to stick it to Bezos!

        Complacency is tacit support of the billionaires and their champion, Donald Trump.

    • Flowerlake says:

      Never got Amazon and I’m living a nice life without it.
      It’s not like I’m in the dark ages or something.

      Though I understand it kind of hooks people by entangling them with services?

      Thing is, if you don’t want Bezos to have the means to do stuff like this, you need to stop buying from Amazon.

  3. Ariel says:

    It was my hometown paper growing up.
    I’ve subscribed as an adult 1000 miles away for years.
    And i am of the cancellers.

    My one hope is that for several generations every decent human within 100 miles of bezos grave will always own spray paint. And at the first opportunity will spray “COWARD” on his grave – even if the vast wealth in a trust replaces the stone every week.
    He will be a coward for eternity.

    Of course, coward is the kinder explanation.
    Because – fascism suits him- no unions, no workers rights, no overtime.
    Trumps project 2025 is bezos best case scenario.

    • Megan says:

      My spouse did two tours of duties at the Post adding up to a decade with them. He is part of the Post “alumni” network and many former employees are deeply disturbed by this decision — it’s antithetical to the paper’s mission to hold Washington accountable. Unfortunately, Will Lewis will use this as an excuse to fire real reporters and hire more Murdoch flunkies.

  4. Whyforthelove says:

    Given how many people have canceled of Bozo wanted to do an op Ed he should have sent it by email. Not touching the Podt until Bezos sells it. Ever all credibility gone. I also canceled my auto subscriptions and moved them to Walmart. I am finding alternatives to Amazon. As soon as the Prime membership runs out bye. I am so damn tired of billionaires and their spoiled baby mentality trying to force a bought election on us

    • Whyforthelove says:

      Apologies for the typos. Thos situation makes me so upset my typing is even worse than usual

    • Josephine says:

      The Walton family (Walmart owners) are also billionaires who don’t bother paying their employees a living wage, going so far as to suggest that employees donate food to each other. They back republicants and union-busters. There are many lawsuits against them for cheating people out of overtime. And I’m not sure, but I think they are the group that keeps their employees at 32 hours so that they don’t have to pay overtime.

      I get it, we are running out of stores to shop from, but Walmart is not it either. Costco is a winner but you have to pay to shop there and it doesn’t have the variety of other stores.

    • Luna says:

      I’m not sure Walmart is a great alternative. They are very conservative and probably donate tons to the GOP including Trump campaign. Although I’m sure that can be verified.

      They just got fined for seriously polluting California https://www.sfgate.com/bayarea/article/walmart-alleged-unlawful-dumping-california-19863436.php

      Costco has a deal where new members can get a $20 membership. I believe you pay the full 60 and get a $40 gift card in return. Then you shop at Costco with the gift card. They also offer shipping and delivery, but I’m sure some areas don’t have a Costco.

  5. Smile says:

    I hope more subscriptions are lost.

  6. Bezo is a facist in his own right so of course he doesn’t want to anger trump. He is a billionaire who wants his tax cut.

  7. ML says:

    Having a billionaire owner who feels that his own interests come before anything else in charge of news media is an effing disaster. The fact that his conservative Brit, William Lewis then tried unconvincingly to say it wasn’t Bezos’s fault is ridiculous. Right now legacy media in the form of the NY Times has lots of information (it’s clear who the people at WaPo feel best leaking to!). They reported Bezos’s Blue Origen meetings with Trump’s people. And they also informed us that Bezos feels that WaPo leans too far to the left and wants more conservative voices: https://san.com/media-miss/jeff-bezos-wants-more-conservative-columnists-at-the-washington-post-new-york-times/

  8. North of Boston says:

    As far as the pearl-clutching journalists, with the argument that cancelling WaPo subscriptions cuts off funding for serious journalism – Bezos and Lewis’s own actions have called into question WaPo’s commitment to serious journalism. Bezos hiring Lewis in the first place, Lewis scurrying around in the shadows trying to manipulate investigations and reporting, including attempting to trade favors to kill reporting about his sleazy, not up to professional journalism standards actions, and now this.

    Aside from my vote and my voice, my money is another way I speak in support of my values, what matters to me. I’d rather fund my subscriptions to The Guardian, The Boston Globe and for the moment, the NY Times and my local outlets, as well as substacks like Heather Cox Richardson’s.

    WaPo’s owner isn’t running it like a home for serious journalism and honest reporting. He’s kept on lying, pandering right wing opinion columnists, his paper has engaged in sane-washing and both-sides-ism and unbalanced treatment of Harris and Trump for months. Yes, there’s also been great investigative reporting and analysis … but the choice not to endorse a candidate, as though Harris and TFG are somehow both okay options and it really doesn’t matter what WaPo says … at THIS moment in time?

    JB, history has its eyes on you … as it does on every prominent media figure right now. The judgement is not going to be pretty, as your moves to appease a fascist wanna-be dictator are plain as day.

    • Normades says:

      Very well put. I was one of those unsubscribers. Unfortunately Bezos isn’t the one that will loose his job but I felt the message had to be sent that that was an unacceptable decision

    • Friendly Crow says:

      I honestly at first thought it was just a billionaire trying to dabble in authenticity and an attempt to be taken seriously as a “thinker”.

      But it’s a Twitter. Buy a flawed but solid platform for voices to make themselves heard and to report the truth and destroy that.

      I will never forget the day Elon took over Twitter. I only used Twitter to follow the Ukrainian invasion by Russian forces. I got on that morning and easily 80% of the Ukrainian journalists and just folks on the ground that I followed were gone. Gone. I couldn’t find them. Partly probably due to the fact that I don’t speak Ukrainian and many had their names etc in Ukrainian. My reposts from them were gone also.

      I spent the morning with a growing sense of horror. All of those voices completely silenced at the whim of a power hungry narcissist with too much money. It kind of felt like watching my own personal Alderaan
      in real time. (Yes that’s a Star Wars reference and I stand by it)

      I deleted all of my personal information and then my account.

    • Flowerlake says:

      There are plenty of newspapers that did endorse Harris.
      People might want to consider supporting those and their journalists.

  9. SIde Eye says:

    I canceled Amazon Prime and put a plan in place to get my sh** elsewhere. My dog stuff I buy from Chewy directly. And I have looked at the brands I buy and now just go directly to their websites. Yes it’s inconvenient as stuff no longer arrives in 2 days (Chewy does ship quickly) but it’s worth it. I have to do without my Prime for movies but it’s doable.

    My addiction to Amazon began with a heightened fear of mass shootings – seriously I hate being out in public in general and this was a way I could avoid being in a mall or wherever when something pops off. My fear of being out in public intensified during the pandemic. I realize I just have to overcome this fear like I did my fear of flying after 9/11.

    We have got to stop willingly handing over our hard earned money to billionaires so they can get bigger boats, fly to Epstein island, exploit the workforce, oppose unions, and threaten democracy. I got off Twitter the minute Space Karen bought it. I knew exactly what it would descend into. I never subscribed to WAPO honestly, the American legacy media is a joke.

    • mblates says:

      i’m one of those (soon to be former) amazon prime customers who used it more for streaming than shipping and purchasing. i took a close look at what i actually watched and what was available elsewhere, and i watch acorn and britbox more than i watch prime. i can get those separately. and they actually have so few free prime movies anymore, i’ll pay elsewhere for what i want to watch (i know they’re probably not better, but peacock is very cheap and has an unexpected ton of content). youtube is also actually a good source for free and cheap tv shows. i guess in this day and age it’s which monopoly do you want to support, but for right now at least it’s anyone but amazon.

      • SIde Eye says:

        Love this – thank you mblates and you are right there are other places to get this content.

      • Friendly Crow says:

        What absolutely sucks is the sheer amount of things on Amazon that aren’t available elsewhere.

        I’m thinking mostly about things as they relate to my kids. We homeschool and being able to order directly from the same company who has a market on Amazon so that I know returns will be easy if needed …. As well as things that I can’t find elsewhere. Like certain critical thinking and logic workbooks etc.

        There isn’t an easy replacement but they are out there- it just takes more time and energy to do so. Something we all know women and esp moms have in spades. 🤪 but it’s worth it.

        You vote with your money too. Make your votes count.

      • ML says:

        Friendly Crow, Maybe think of it as a spectrum? If you need something for your kids, or if someone is in a rural area, or whatever, cut down everything but what you need. Trust me, if Amazon’s traffic goes from being major traffic in an urban area like Los Angeles during rush hour being more like a rural road in North Dakota, this will have a huge impact. Sure, the road in a less populated place gets vehicles, but nothing like LA traffic. It’s a group effort.

      • Emcee3 says:

        Another [Free!!] streaming source might be your local public library. I have cards w/ my city & county branches here in TX. Each have their own separate platforms [Hoopla & Kanopy] which offer independent films, classic films, documentaries & some US & UK television series.

    • Mairzy Doats says:

      Funny you mention Chewy. I order a particular cat litter from them, but the brand was unavailable for a long time and the brand website does not sell direct. I wrote the company and found out that they make a similar formulation for Amazon and they suggested I order from Amazon until they could replenish the more known formation to Chewy.

      • SIde Eye says:

        Oh wow. I would email the company again and let them know this. One thing I know about Chewy, the company is amazing. They sent flowers when my 16 year old Lab died. Apparently they do this when everyone’s pet dies – you call to cancel your Autoship and you speak to a compassionate, kind person, and then flowers arrive. They have my business for life for this. I bet if you email them, you won’t have this problem for long.

  10. Caroline says:

    I commented “traitors” on their IG, and was threatened with removal, yet I see the most disgusting vile and threatening comments on FB and IG every day that won’t be removed. Something ain’t right here.

  11. Nanea says:

    As I read elsewhere, democracy dies in broad daylight.

    It’s not like there’s a difficult choice to make: rapist, misogynoir felon, in addition to being a longtime conman who regularly stiffed vendors and craftspeople. Old, suffering from cognitive decline.

    Or the successful former prosecutor, AG of California and current Vice President.

    It should have been so easy.

    • Brassy Rebel says:

      I tell people the choice is between a steak dinner and rat poison. How deeply the “both sides suck” narrative has infected the body politic. And don’t forget. Trump also loves Nazis.

  12. L says:

    I’m a 100% ok with our media not endorsing any candidate. I want fair and news to be news. I don’t need WaPo to tell me who to vote for I need them to report on news

    • mblates says:

      and that would be fine if that’s what was going on here, but it’s not. bezos ordered no endorsement so he could stay on trump’s good side for government favors and subsidies in case he wins. how is that impartial?

      • North of Boston says:

        And I’m fine with the Justice Dept conducting investigations into possible criminal wrongdoing by presidential candidates.

        However,

        – the bar for when and what and who to investigate should be the same for all candidates, based on the law and credible professional assessments and judgement and the facts available;

        – the Justice Department should not blast out announcements – loudly through its prominent official channels – of investigation nothing-burgers with no new compelling info in the final weeks before an election.

        Otherwise you get situations like Trump and his team whistling past unrestrained with dozens of criminal actions while James Comey pops out on to the national stage to gravely announce:

        “something something Clinton’s emails we are digging into to ALL the BAD stuff to find the truth! ”
        in the final days before Election Day

        Followed – too late – by
        “oh, nevermind, it was just the same stuff we already found, no big issues after all, she’s fine”

        With WaPo, it’s the questionable editorial decisions WRT tone, content of Trump coverage vs Harris, combined with “at the last minute” and “with questionable motives” including obvious conflict of interest and “disinformation about why” that’s the problem.

        Well that and also … if WaPo’s editorial leadership doesn’t see a clear choice, can’t publicly state a clear preference between which of THESE two candidates offers a better path forward for the country, democracy, the world, humanity…they should hang their heads in shame, put down their pens/keyboards and walk away. They’ve got no business pushing out content under the Washington Post masthead.

    • Miranda says:

      The problem is not that WaPo or any other paper won’t endorse a specific candidate. The problem is the machinations behind that decision. And they’re not likely to do a very good job with nonbiased reporting of actual news, either, if the owner is vying for government contracts.

    • ML says:

      First off, journalists have stated that had WaPo and the LA Times done this a year ahead of time, it would have most likely been accepted.
      Next, suddenly changing course weeks out from an election gives the impression that there is something wrong with a candidate. See Trump’s and the inter/national news’s reaction.
      Furthermore, Lewis is indicating Bezos had no idea this was coming, which seems untrue. The NY Times (not Bezos’s WaPo) reported a possible quid pro quo with Blue Origen and Trump. In certain countries like Russia, this is how politicians control the news so it’s favorable to them.
      Finally, WaPo has endorsed political candidates since the first elected president after Nixon , Jimmy Carter, with one exception. Each time, they explain why and what their values are.

    • Walking the Walk says:

      Cool, so you weren’t okay with the WaPo and other op-eds demanding that Biden step down?

  13. Old and Tired says:

    It will be 200,001 in a day or two — when I started to cancel my subscription, I learned that my auto-renew had just happened in late September. They offered me a $60 refund on my subscription, and I said yes. When I see the $60 credit, I’ll complete the cancellation.

    L., I generally don’t care if media make endorsements or not, but in these specific situations, LA Times and WaPo, the editorial staff generally does endorse, had drafted the endorsement, and then had the owner squelch it. The owner-endorsed squelching is what I cannot tolerate.

    • Friendly Crow says:

      If the news and the news papers were truly unbiased and reporting things factually – such as fact checking in real time, across all platforms – and had declared that they would never endorse a presidential candidate again for this specific reason a long ass time ago – I would be ok with this.

      The billionaire owner of a newspaper stomping on his editors and journalists to make them shut up after a completely suspicious meeting with the convicted felon running for president … that’s not the moral high ground Bezos is trying to claim. He’s so far morally underground that Satan built him his own luxury suite.

      I felt terrible buying anything from Amazon knowing some of the conditions the workers struggle under.

      This seems like election interference or …. I don’t even know. I don’t have the word for it.

      But if the billionaires are kissing trumps ring this publicly – I’m very scared for how the election is going to roll out. They know the score. They buy the score. What do they know.

  14. bisynaptic says:

    #WaPoSeppuku

  15. Js says:

    I’m one of those who cancelled. So is my MIL. It’s not so much about sending a message like a boycott… it’s that all at once I realized the post no longer was and more importantly, had NO CHANCE of returning to its former state of being one of the most credible news organizations. And if they aren’t credible what’s the point of reading them at all. Braucli’s assertion that we have to support them to support journalism is absurd and misses the point- that as of this non-editorial the post is not practicing journalism anymore, it’s merely the vanity publishing arm of an MNC.

  16. Tina says:

    Cancelled my WP a year ago but I cancelled my Prime auto renewal yesterday. I lived without prime before I can do it again. Will it affect Bezos? No but it’s my only way to voice my frustration.

    • Flowerlake says:

      Actually, yes, it does affect him.
      Every vote done and every purchase not made affects them.
      Because you’re not the only one, and your example encourages others.

  17. Kyle O says:

    I can use the approximately $200 per year for my Prime membership towards shipping cost elsewhere. I’m sure I won’t lose much money if any in making this decision. To reiterate I canceled my amazon membership as soon as I learned Bezos had pulled the Harris endorsement, and my son canceled our Washington Post subscription. There is no going back for me and the rest of my family.

  18. Kyle O says:

    To the earlier poster. I cannot bring myself to buy Goya after it’s CEO sniveling support of Trump. Will not be buying from Wayfair anymore either. Thanks for the heads up.

  19. Seraphina says:

    I will just say this and it is shallow but oh well:

    We all knew Bezos lacks and good decision making due to what he now dates: a human blowup doll with a feline head.

  20. Ponchorella says:

    I also cancelled WaPo and Prime. Unfortunately, my WaPo sub just renewed on the 8th. I find that Amazon doesn’t have the best prices most of the time anyways.

  21. Walking the Walk says:

    Cancelled WaPo and Prime. I shop local whenever I can as it is, but used Amazon for convenience, no more.

    And for some acting like newspapers should not endorse, these are the same AH who let op-eds run amok about Biden all damn summer long and then picked up when the debate happened. They would not call Trump out for being racist until this past freaking Monday. The media got salty when the DNC invited TikTok and other influencers there and Kamala and Biden were talking to them. The way of traditional media is gone. They lie and they answer to their owners. Freaking Politico and some other rag this weekend lied that Harris won’t let Biden campaign for them which was so untrue that they got ratioed real quick on Twitter. The media is not the friends of anyone “liberal”. They wanted to grow with the conservative crowd that hates them. Bezos just learned real time who is reading his paper and got shocked by it. That was the worst op-ed I ever read in my life (Bezos).

  22. yipyip says:

    I wish Bezos, Musk, and Trump all got a nasty itch they can’t scratch, boils on their behinds so they are never comfortable, endless miserable paper cuts, and an Ocean full of Karma that really catches up to them.

  23. Merrie says:

    As a former reporter, I am so angry that newspapers have lost their voices to greedy owners/corporations. However, everyone who is canceling their subscription, I understand wanting to show how angry you are by Bezos’ cowardly actions, but he won’t suffer from this. The employees will. Positions will be eliminated to make up for the loss, further damaging journalism.

    I was a newspaper reporter for 15 years. I loved it. I met my husband in the newsroom, as well as some of my closest friends. But because of the decline in ads sales and subscriptions, I left after surviving three rounds of layoffs at my last newspaper. My husband is still in the business, but with a different publication. Today, that newsroom is a shell of itself. They eventually sold the building, with a small conference room set aside at the press for editors and designers. I have no idea what they did with the Pulitzer Prize that hung proudly in the main entrance.

    • ML says:

      My initial reaction to the WaPo and LA Times cancellations was “Good!” Then I chatted with a US friend who had the same reaction to the cancellations as you, Merrie–in one of the articles yesterday, I posted that view.

      I thought about it, and respectfully, I do understand your concerns and your viewpoint. My concern if I were a subscriber though would be about the information my money was supporting. If Soon Shiong has already quashed a negative story about his friend, if Bezos has already denied being informed about Lewis supposedly quashing WaPo’s endorsement…going forward how can I trust the published information? Any inconvenient or unwanted stories run the chance of being censored, and possibly more have. Soon Shiong and Bezos have terrible explanations as to why this happened at their papers so close to the election, and in both cases, it’s been interpreted as a lack of confidence in Harris. It’s horrifying, but if I look at how I can make certain I am not funding censorship or misinformation, the most effective strategy is to jump ship until there are guardrails to Bezos and Soon Shiong’s influence.

    • MsIam says:

      I do feel bad for the reporters but I’m not supporting that garbage. We know that Will Lewis killed the story of his involvement in the hacking cases. He should have been fired immediately for that. At least the New Yorker got rid of that reporter that was doing whatever with RFKjr. Now they’ve suppressed the endorsement of Kamala Harris and lying that they are returning to their roots of not making endorsements. What will they suppress next? WaPo is not what it used to be.

  24. KC says:

    This doesn’t hurt Jeff Bezos one bit but it’s sure is going to hurt the journalists who are laid off from WaPo after this. I swear to God, sometimes liberals are so f*cking stupid. And I say this as one. When it comes to actually winning elections, endorsements don’t really matter that much. If those 200,000 subscribers had all signed up for door shifts for the next week, well, that would make an actual significant difference. I worked in progressive electoral politics for nearly 20 years and I know without a doubt that only a teeny, tiny fraction of the people canceling their subscriptions and freaking out about this on social media are doing the single most impactful action they can take that translates into actual votes.

    • Flowerlake says:

      Actually, yes, it does affect things.

      People moving their money, readership and support from a place that has been taken over by an complicit billionaire to newspapers that are still not affected is a good move.

      Those newspapers and journalists also need support, so it’s best to amplify and spread their voices than to be supporting the billionaires who are hurting everyone.

      Also, you don’t know all those 200.000 people, so stop making judgements based on what some other people did.

      Since you want to do the “if only other people did this and this” thing, then I can say: If only you had linked to websites or given other information here about how you feel people can be useful.

      Like so:

      https://go.kamalaharris.com/calls/

    • Grace says:

      Sadly, you nailed it!

    • MsIam says:

      @KC some of those journalists have resigned from WaPo and I bet more will follow. They understand what it means when integrity is lost and I respect them for it. And calling people names and bullying people is right out of the Trump playbook and certainly not liberal.

  25. Grace says:

    I am what some would call a “flaming liberal” and happy to be called that. My first thought when reading about their “non-endorsement” was to cancel immediately. But, I have mixed emotions about it now. With fewer subscribers, it may result in less income for Wapo, then less staff and reporting, at a time when we need it most. However, maybe it would affect JB’s actions in the future if he feels any financial pain from this. I am more than ragingly angry at the state of our political system, government, and the ever present noise coming from the “magats”. What are we to do? I am earnestly asking that question and sad about the state of things.

    • Flowerlake says:

      Or consider cancelling and moving to a newspaper that did endorse.
      They also need readers and support.

  26. Luna says:

    NYT reported that Bezos made the decision to ask the article, even if Lewis did fall on his sword. Unlocked article link below.

    The Guardian and the Associated Press are also great places to get news. Many commenters on Washington Post articles suggested supporting journalists on Substack as well.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2024/10/27/business/media/washington-post-president-endorsement.html?unlocked_article_code=1.Vk4.xzED.zKH4_42XUplX&smid=url-share

  27. SadBrad says:

    I was on the fence about cancelling my WaPo subscription–until I looked at their front page today. I feel terrible for the good people there who are imperiled, but after I saw what they are offering as election coverage today, I cancelled. Not interested in what editors and owners are “curating.”

  28. Vuyelwa Ncube says:

    Thing is I don’t think he cares. These Billionaires didn’t but media businesses to make money