More than 60,000 Washington Post customers canceled subscriptions after Bezos’ last move

The Washington Post just lost a massive chunk of customers following sweeping job cuts.

Following the decision to pare down the outlet’s workforce by about 350 reporters, which was supported by owner Jeff Bezos, customers spoke out in the most impactful way they could. Over 60,000 people protested the choice to eliminate 44% of the paper’s journalists by canceling their subscriptions, according to The New York Post.

“In the end, the sports and books departments were folded, and the metro section was gutted. Most international correspondents and editors were laid off, including those in the Middle East, just weeks before the United States and Israel attacked Iran,” the outlet wrote. “More than 60,000 readers canceled their digital subscriptions that week, according to an internal document reviewed by The Times. (A spokeswoman for The Post disputed that figure but declined to provide an alternate number.)”

The WaPo offers two subscription tiers, “Core” and “Premium,” at both monthly and annual rates. For the first year, subscribers can pay $40 or $60 for an annual renewal, with prices skyrocketing to $140 and $190/year afterward.

(Screengrab: The Washington Post)

This means that, if the numbers from the NYT are true, WaPo could lose $2.4million per year at a minimum.

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Sierra Marlee

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