What was once my favorite newspaper and the pinnacle of American political journalism, holding presidents and politicians to account in the interest of the public for generations, has become the unlikeliest of casualties. For a paper that survived the attacks of the Nixon Administration, whose bread and butter was in exposing political corruption, and in our age of its extremist display, the paper’s disintegration speaks as much to the changing of our political institutions as it does our media institutions.
I feel helpless seeing what’s happening to the Washington Post
Next Article Jimmy Lai and the American Promise
Micah Allred
Los Ángeles native, D.C. local, CSU Chico and AmeriCorps alumni, and political journalist. MA in comparative politics from American University School of Public Affairs.
