David Shipley, editor of the Washington Post editorial page, took responsibility for spiking the cartoon by Ann Telnaes, an act that touched off a firestorm of controversy.
The cartoon showed several billionaires, including Jeff Bezos, paying homage to Trump.
Shipley stopped publication because, he said, the cartoon was repetitious of articles on the same subject.
Telnaes announced her resignation in a sharply worded piece on Substack.
Shipley sent the following letter to staff at the Post. By now, they must be deeply demoralized, given Bezos’ intervention to block the editorial board’s endorsement of Kamala Harris., his gift of $1 million to Trump for his inauguration, and the Amazon payment of $40 million to Trump for the license to the life story of Melania, produced by Melania. Bezos owns Amazon.
Shipley wrote:
Dear DOO,
It’s been nearly a week since Ann Telnaes resigned. I’ve been gathering my thoughts in that time and there are a few things I’d like to share. Given the depth of the response, and some of the assumptions that have been made, I hope you’ll read to the end.
Let me start with the basics.
Our owner, in his own words, is a “complexifier.” Jeff supports a news organization while having significant interests (and work) elsewhere. His support allows The Post to exist and produce excellent, independent journalism; it also means that editorial decisions can be viewed by the outside world through the prism of his ownership.
My decision not to run a cartoon by Ann in which Jeff was depicted is being viewed through this prism. I believe I made a sound editorial decision. Ann felt otherwise. She offered her interpretation. I’d like to offer mine.
First, I decided not to run the cartoon because it was repetitive. When I learned of Ann’s piece, we had just published a column on billionaire visits to Trump (with a clear mention of our owner) and we had a satire piece on the same topic underway (also with a clear reference to our owner). Yet another piece in the span of a few days struck me as overkill.
This is a subjective judgment, but it is a subjective judgment in sync with a longstanding approach. In my time here, we have focused on reducing the number of articles we publish on a given topic and from the same point of view within a given time frame – all as a way to improve the overall quality and variety of our report.
To that same end, I did not feel the cartoon was strong. Could it have been made better? Possibly. In fact, we’d recently worked with Ann on a cartoon that had gone through edits and was published after she and editors had finished working together.
In this regard, I regret that we did not have the opportunity to revisit this possibility. In what (unfortunately) turned out to be my final conversation with Ann last Friday afternoon, it was my understanding that she and I had agreed to take the weekend to consider options and that we would speak on Monday. I respect Ann’s work and was actively considering her suggestions bar one – the idea that we add language to her contract restricting editing – when she put out her Substack on Friday night, closing the door on any possibility of further discussion.
The decisions on redundancy and quality were both judgments on my part. I stand by them. At no point did I discuss any of this with Will Lewis or Jeff Bezos. This was my call.
Now let me share a couple broader thoughts. Do I pay extra attention if Jeff is in a column or a cartoon or the subject of a story? Of course I do. Does this prevent us from commenting on him? No. Look at the record. The two other pieces we ran – pieces I saw and was aware of – should dispel that bit of mythology. Do we allow dissent? Yes. Erik Wemple published a chat taking issue with my actions. Letters to the editor will do the same. If you have additional doubts, look at our published response to the decision not to run a presidential endorsement. If the work is good, if it is relevant, if it advances the story, we’ll publish it. This is my prism.
My job is a balancing act. Was I extra careful here? Sure. It’s obviously true that we have published other pieces that are redundant and duplicative. We have also published things that others judged strong and effective, and I did not. So, yes, scrutiny is on high when it comes to our owner.
But this extra scrutiny has a purpose. I am trying to ensure the overall independence of our report. Though we have a “complexifying” owner, I will not use that as a reason to exempt him from the evenhandedness we ought to extend to any public figure (an evenhandedness other news organizations extend to their owners). Nor will coverage of him be an exception to our strategic turn toward heightened curation and diminished repetition. By exercising care, we preserve the ability to do what we are in business to do: To speak forthrightly and without fear about things that matter.
I know many of you are concerned that we might be wavering in this regard. I get that concern, but I don’t think it’s true. I believe that The Post’s business success depends on its integrity and its independence. These things cannot be separated. If you don’t have them, you don’t have a business – nor are you adhering to the mission that this newspaper has always held dear. As the person responsible for this department, I am guided by this belief. And if I believe we can’t act on it any longer, I will share that feeling with you and act accordingly. But that’s not what’s happening now.
America and the world are entering a complicated moment. It’s one in which honesty, clarity of thought, fair-mindedness and courage will be required. These are the values that will guide our coverage – and my judgments. This is who we are, and it’s my belief that our work shows it.
D.
P.S. Many of you have already shared your (varied) views on the situation; please know that my door is always open to discuss decisions. I want to hear your thoughts about how we do what we do.

skinless
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Complexify this: BS.
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“…strategic turn toward heightened curation and diminished repetition…translates into not highlighting Trump’s lies because they are repetitive. “…By exercising care, we preserve the ability to do what we are in business to do: To speak forthrightly and without fear about things that matter.” Which explains why the Post refused to endorse Kamala Harris. Right. What a bunch of CYA.
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Weak as water explanation/excuse…
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Cynical (or should that be sardonic?) commentary from across the pond.
I spent long years in two UK government departments, and in my role as a junior manager it fell upon my shoulders to compose many a document to public, staff or upper reaches of management. By trial and error a skill of a modest sort was honed to, shall we say massage a message into a format which whereas it might not please everyone, it might minimise the annoyance to simple acceptance of a circumstance. It was not successful all of the time, you should never win them all, that leads to arrogance.
Anyway through this ‘prism’ (isn’t that a lovely variable word?)
That missive from David Shipley, is a good piece of work in so far as you are trying to defend the indefensible in the luckless role of a middle sort of manager, between staff / public and ‘The Boss’. It goes into great length and depth with a good lyrical flow that displays a thoughtful note. An indication that the writer wrestled long and hard into the day or night with the decision to censor a cartoon, that they against their other angles decided to take the tough decision, because that is what they are there for.
Professionally I applaud the misdirection. It has been put across intelligently and with a degree of surface of integrity. He respects the cartoonist’s work, but he has to balance the question of a charge of repetition. A thoughtful segment. And he understands concerns. It is vital that the writer understands concerns, after all you don’t want to lower the level of the debate do you?
And no name calling.
Obviously such a person has no place in the coming Whitehouse staff. The Post will be in safe hands.
Yes it is a very good piece of work. One might say heroic in trying to minimise the obvious influence or concern for the owner’s feelings.
And he might have got away with it were it not for the fact that outside of this issue the long cold hand of very wealthy folk and very malign influencers are taking their place at The Court of Trump and acceding to the Unholy Church of MAGA.
Mr Shipley’s problem here is one he cannot hope to cope with. this. A large portion of the US population’s ‘Foul-Play’ radar is working at maximum.
With this I sardonically (yes that is the better word) tip my hat to his effort, then conclude with a sad shaking of my head.
Oh, one final thought one of those old American saying I do love and use ‘Close. But no see-gar’
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deteremineddespitewp, what you said.
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Thanks
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The next stage of course is to ignore complaints altogether.
Bezos is not serious about being a newspaperman. He’s too cowardly for the job.
So much for serious journalism. It was the first casualty of the internet age and nothing’s changed. This has been happening for decades now.
It’s also the “American Way”. Money over truth every time. Every goddamned time.
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It was a bad decision on many levels. This missive only makes it worse.
But considering the “shock and awe” campaign of destruction that FELON47 is about to unleash on his own nation, the bosses at The Washington Post will soon have plenty of other opportunities to demonstrate they have some backbone.
Mr. Shipley etc…..get ready!
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“Complexifier”? What does that mean?
Shipley’s letter reads as a defensive attempt to justify the decision to self-censor so that a certain incoming administration will be nice to Bezos.
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Simply put, Mr. Shipley is CYA! All those “reasons” are spurious at best. He’ll get fired for standing up for his reporters opines. He deftly used “because of this” and “because of that” the cartoon was yanked. Again, CYA. One example of this BS is this; okay, so if “overkill” is the reason, why so many damn stories on politics in general, or even one more about Trump? All politicians are fair game as are the “hangers-on.”
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