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Bezos’ Subdivided Post

Status · Natalie Korach · last updated

On a frigid January day in 2016, Jeff Bezos stood alongside a group of high-profile politicians—including then Secretary of State John Kerry and D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser—to celebrate the official opening of The Washington Post’s new K Street headquarters. The event was treated as a symbolic new chapter for the newspaper under Bezos’ ownership, complete with a digital ribbon-cutting ceremony as the billionaire explained that, rather than buying The Post’s old building, he wanted a new space because he was “a huge fan of leaning into the future.”

The Post experienced remarkable success during Donald Trump’s first term, and at the time, Bezos—who acquired the newspaper in 2013—was widely viewed as a promising steward, capable of bringing The Post into the digital future while continuing to invest in the journalism that made the paper a storied institution. Bezos even flew to Washington to make the final call on where The Post’s new headquarters would be located, eventually landing on a 16-year lease on K Street.

A decade later, The Post is preparing to slash a significant portion of the very headquarters Bezos once championed as a symbol of the paper’s future, Status has learned…