Antelope Valley Press

Washington Post names Buzbee exec. editor

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NEW YORK (AP) — Re-energized under owner Jeff Bezos, The Washington Post named Associated Press veteran Sally Buzbee as its executive editor Tuesday, making her the first woman in the paper’s 144-year history to lead the newsroom.

She succeeds the retired Marty Baron in one of the most celebrated jobs in journalism, the same role held by the legendary Ben Bradlee when the Post helped break the Watergate scandal in the 1970s.

Buzbee, 55, has been with the AP since 1988 in jobs that included Washington bureau chief, and has been its senior vice president and executive editor since 2017.

The Post, bought from the Graham family by Amazon’s Bezos in 2013, employs 1,000 journalist­s in 26 locations around the world, up from 12 places in 2013. Under Baron, who took over in 2013, it won 10 Pulitzer Prizes and was recognized for its hard-hitting coverage of Donald Trump.

In an interview, Buzbee stressed her commitment to diversity and to telling stories in a compelling way across many formats.

“The challenge of journalism everywhere is to meet audiences where they are and make our journalism as accessible and sharp and transparen­t as possible,” she said. “The Post has an extraordin­ary team that is in many ways on the cutting edge of figuring out how to do this.”

Fred Ryan, the Post’s publisher and CEO, pointed to her achievemen­ts and experience in leading a global news organizati­on.

“In an extensive search that included many of the best journalist­s in America, Sally stood out as the right person to lead the Post going forward,” Ryan said. “She is widely admired for her absolute integrity, boundless energy and dedication to the essential role journalism plays in safeguardi­ng our democracy.”

Buzbee flew under the radar in the much-watched search for Baron’s successor. In some ways that’s due to the AP’s standing in the business, both ubiquitous and somewhat invisible, since it sells its journalism to thousands of outlets that use it on their websites, front pages and broadcasts.

Yet with its 250 bureaus around the world and robust operations in video, text, audio and photograph­y, running the AP is one of journalism’s most complex jobs.

Buzbee directed AP’s journalism through the COVID-19 pandemic, Trump’s presidency, the #MeToo movement, Brexit and protests over racial injustice. She emphasized breaking news in all formats and deepened the AP’s enterprise and investigat­ive efforts.

Under her leadership, the AP won Pulitzer Prizes in feature photograph­y and internatio­nal reporting, and had six other Pulitzer finalists.

In an era when diversity in leadership is being closely watched, Buzbee’s appointmen­t comes shortly after Kevin Merida, a Black man who worked more than two decades at the Post, was hired as the top editor at the Los Angeles Times. ABC News and MSNBC hired Black leaders in the past few months.

Wesley Lowery, a former Post reporter now at CBS News, referred to Merida in tweeting Tuesday: “The overqualif­ied black candidate not even getting a serious call about the job, only for it to go to a white lady and be framed as a win for diversity is the entire story of newsroom diversity efforts.”

Buzbee said the AP made important strides in diversity and in opening paths to leadership while she was in charge.

In 2004, Buzbee became AP’s Middle East editor, based in Cairo.

In 2010, she was promoted to deputy managing editor at the agency’s New York headquarte­rs and led the founding of the Nerve Center, AP’s now-integral hub for global news coordinati­on and customer communicat­ion.

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