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The Washington Post is making another big change.
Senior Political Editor Dan Eggen has been removed from his position.
The Washington Post abruptly fired its political editor without giving a reason for the decision, he claimed — the latest turmoil at the left-leaning newspaper owned by Amazon founder Jeff Bezos.
Veteran political writer Dan Eggen, who was appointed senior political editor just two years ago, was informed he would be “removed” from the role, according to an email he sent obtained by Lachlan Cartwright. He said he was “devastated.”
“I struggled to decide how to write this message because it has an unappealing pandering element to it. But guess what? I was informed on Monday that I would be removed as senior political editor at the end of the year. I will leave it to others to explain why,” the email said.
A WaPo spokesperson said Thursday in response to inquiries from the New York Post that the company does not comment on personnel decisions.
The Washington Post is expected to lose $77 million this year.
The Washington Post was already in financial trouble before the recent boycott movement against the paper.
A report in New York Magazine's Intelligencer sheds light on a recent meeting in the Post's newsroom, where upper management revealed that the paper is on pace to lose a whopping $77 million this year. That number doesn't even include the staggering 250,000 subscribers it lost. over billionaire owner Jeff Bezos' last-minute decision not to support Vice President Kamala Harris in the final days of the presidential election.
“[It’s] It's not surprising at all,” one Post official told Fox News Digital in response to the report. “It means 'to sit down.'”
Remarkably, the $77 million loss reported is exactly what Washington Post publisher Will Lewis said in May that the paper lost year over year.
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