NEW YORK (AP) - The Washington Post’s new publisher is facing questions about whether he made efforts to conceal - in his own newspaper and elsewhere - his involvement in a British phone hacking scandal from his time working for Rupert Murdoch a decade ago.
After editor’s departure, Washington Post’s publisher faces questions about phone hacking stories
NEW YORK (AP) - The Washington Post’s new publisher is facing questions about whether he made efforts to conceal - in his own newspaper and elsewhere - his involvement in a British phone hacking scandal from his time working for Rupert Murdoch a decade ago.
The weeklong saga, which began with the abrupt departure of the Post’s executive editor Sunday night, offers a window into differences between approaches to journalism in Britain and the United States - and touches on delicate issues of trust in the American media community as it approaches a contentious and seismic presidential election.
The publisher and CEO, Will Lewis, has denied any wrongdoing in Britain and at the Post.
Lewis, a former publisher of The Wall Street Journal, arrived in January to turn around the Post, which is awash in red ink and seen its digital readership drop by a half since 2020. Lewis is also the vice chairman of The Associated Press’ board of directors.