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The Next Editor of the Washington PostWho should it be?
By Jack ShaferPosted Tuesday, May 20, 2008, at 6:32 PM ET

The executive editorship of the Washington Post has been put into play by the paper's publisher, Katharine Weymouth, who, according to a report in yesterday's New York Times, has talked to a cluster of possible candidates and others about who should succeed Leonard Downie Jr.
The Times identifies Newsweek's Jon Meacham, Washington Post columnist David Ignatius, former Wall Street Journal Managing Editor Marcus W. Brauchli, current and former Post managing editors Phil Bennett and Steve Coll, The New Yorker's David Remnick (a former Postie), Washingtonpost.com Editor Liz Spayd, and Post columnist Eugene H. Robinson as Weymouth's communicants. While every one of these veterans possesses the smarts and skills to edit today's Washington Post, I would hope that Weymouth also consult a less Post-centric list of prospects and think more in terms of what sort of person should edit tomorrow's paper.
But first a parenthetical.
(Am I the only one creeped out by what looks like an aggressive search to fill a job that has yet to be vacated? The Times reports that Downie "is not exactly being forced out, but that [Weymouth] is pressuring him, and he is not happy about it." As publisher, Weymouth has every right to name a new editor any damn time she pleases. But Downie, 66, has served the paper well, preserving and extending Ben Bradlee's accomplishments and adding his own. The search, or the talking tour, or whatever you want to call it, makes Weymouth look bad, and it undercuts Downie, who has to tell press-beat reporters almost daily that he's not quitting, not taking the buyout, not going anywhere soon. And it makes the Post look unstable. If Weymouth is replacing Downie, let's have out with it, if only to reduce the cringe factor. He deserves better.)
Just two people, Bradlee and Downie, have led the Post's editorial side during the past 43 years, the Times notes, and this has made the institution more insular and plodding than newspapers that change top editors frequently. Point of reference: The New York Times has had five executive editors in just the last 20 years.
If the news business had not changed since 1991—the year Downie took over from Bradlee—I'd say clone Downie and continue course. But ongoing tumult in the business requires an editor less psychically beholden to the existing order than those listed above, one who isn't so busy preserving the old that he can't invent the new. In no particular order then, I present my candidates for executive editor of the Washington Post.
VandeHarris: Political aces John F. Harris and Jim VandeHei left the Washington Post to start the newspaper-Web site amalgam Politico in the fall of 2006 and quickly made a place for themselves at the daily-reading table. Their professionalism and dot-com-ish entrepreneurial skills should make them top entrants in the succession sweepstakes. Better than most, they understand how to make something new, how to hire young and smart, and how to take chances.
Downside: They're bolted together at the hip, which makes it difficult for them to pass through the normal-aperture doorway without walking sideways.
Jonathan Landman: I won't remind you of what Landman is most famous for because that is the least of his accomplishments. Landman has visited most of the stations of the cross at the New York Times, where he now runs the digital-news side. In my vision, the future executive editor of the Washington Post would spend six months at the Washingtonpost.com as its top editor and then annex the newspaper, just to let people know that the company's priority is electronic.
When Times Executive Editor Bill Keller appointed Landman deputy managing editor in charge of digital journalism in 2005, he said, "There is nothing quite as infectious as Jon Landman when he's excited about something." A quick round of antibiotic knocked out the infection back then, so I'm certain that if appointed to the Post job he could clear his disease quickly and lead the new Post to glory.
Downside: He's never been a foreign correspondent. Whoops! That's an upside!
Evan Smith or Adam Moss: I've listed Smith and Moss together not because they're joined in any fashion but because they're both inventive magazine types who have the patience to build the whole, not just the part. At Texas Monthly, Smith covers the state as though it were an independent republic, which many of its citizens still think it is. Like Downie, he has sustained and extended somebody else's founding vision, which is almost impossible to do. T.M. investigates, it sustains long-form literary journalism, it entertains, it wins the usual awards, and it publishes the extraordinary Mimi Swartz. At New York magazine, Moss covers the city as though it were an independent republic, which many of its citizens think it is. Raised by a pack of wild magazines in the remote Yukon (some say Long Island), he understands the publication gestalt better than anybody. He rejuvenated the tired New York franchise, which is advertisement enough.
Downside: Both would regard the job as a demotion.
Chuck Todd: Washington is a company town. The company town's business is politics. The Post is the company town's newspaper, so you could do a lot worse than hire Todd, NBC News' political director and this year's Mark Halperin. He was also the long-time editor-in-chief of the Hotline, which indicates managerial experience. He's platform agnostic, understanding print, TV (which is just the Web with fewer options), and the Web. He's a workaholic, as this Howie Kurtz profile illustrates, and only 36, which in and of itself would send a signal to the newsroom if he became editor.
Downside: Would the Post be comfortable with a former presidential campaign worker who married a Democratic consultant?
Jill Abramson: Abramson is one of the best journalists in the business, and I don't say that just because she used to listen to me when we rode the Orange Line from downtown D.C. to Arlington together in the old days. She's run stuff (Legal Times in D.C. and the Times Washington bureau), and she excelled at the Wall Street Journal, where she rose to Washington deputy bureau chief. I have no reason to believe that she could successfully fuse the dotcom and the paper Post into a brilliant single thing except faith—and the fact that she got run over by a truck in 2007 and the truck lost.
Downside: Too perfect a candidate (see also Dean Baquet). And besides, she couldn't be talked into the job, as she expects to succeed Bill Keller as executive editor of the Times.
Jacob Weisberg: Experienced journalist? Check. Check. Check. Understands the Web, knows how to run a publication, is a known quantity to the Graham family? Check. Knows his way around writing a book? Check. Check. Knows how to be goofy? Check. Rhodes scholarship? Check. Understands the ruling class? Check. Declined membership in Skull and Bones? Check. Understands politics? Check. Tolerant of massive pains in the neck? Check. Expansive view of the Web? Check. Check. Determined? You have to ask?
Downside: I'd have to break in a new editor of Slate.
Others worthy of inclusion are Jeff Fager, executive producer of 60 Minutes; James Bennet, former Timesman and current editor-in-chief of the Atlantic (don't hate him because he used to be a foreign correspondent!); Joshua Micah Marshall, editor and founder of Talking Points Memo; John Battelle, founding publisher of the Industry Standard, a co-founding editor at Wired; former Los Angeles Times and MacWeek guy; chairman of the Web business Federated Media Publishing; Jon Klein, president of CNN/U.S. Last, we're all going to work for Brian Stelter eventually, so why not get it over with?
******
I've got other names, but I've run out of time. Who would you like to see edit the Washington Post? Send your candidates to . (E-mail may be quoted by name in "The Fray," Slate's readers' forum, in a future article, or elsewhere unless the writer stipulates otherwise. Permanent disclosure: Slate is owned by the Washington Post Co.) Track my errors: This hand-built RSS feed will ring every time Slate runs a "Press Box" correction. For e-mail notification of errors in this specific column, type the word Stelter in the subject head of an e-mail message and send it to .
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