I’m thinking of dropping my subscription to the Washington Post. Historically, the Washington Post has been a good barometer of the prevailing wisdom in Washington, DC. Getting the point-of-view of the nearly official inside the Beltway view was worth paying for. Since its acquisition that has become decreasingly the case. What I have paid for was insight into the Washington consensus; I wonder if the Post still reflects that consensus.
That’s less something I can document than a feeling, a vibe. What sparked this reaction in me was two recent editorials. The first was strongly in favor of the construction of data centers. The other was in support of the construction of nuclear reactors. It’s not so much that I disagreed with either editorial than that I couldn’t imagine the Post running either editorial five years ago and I don’t believe they reflected the prevailing wisdom in Washington. Five years ago both positions were at best contested and often politically radioactive within the Democratic coalition that largely defined Washington’s policy center of gravity.
I can’t tell from my outsider position 2,000 miles away whether the new publisher is intervening directly, the WaPo’s reporters and editors are trying to anticipate the view that the publisher would take in an effort at securing their jobs, or the Washington consensus has changed. From the standpoint of a subscriber, the mechanism matters less than the outcome; either would produce the same shift I sense.
I also subscribe to the Wall Street Journal. Some consider that a pro-Trump, pro-Republican media outlet but I don’t think that’s fair. I think that the Wall Street Journal is a stubbornly pro-business, anti-tax (because they see higher taxes as anti-business) journal. They frequently run editorials against Trump and the Republicans when either take positions that the editors see as anti-business. You would think that Democrats would draw a lesson from that but apparently not. The WSJ gives me a consistent, intelligible pro-business lens. The WaPo used to provide such a lens for the Washington consensus. If those converge, one becomes redundant.
The brutal truth is that I don’t need to pay to get a pro-business libertarian viewpoint. If the WaPo is no longer giving me something distinct, specifically, a reliable read on the Washington consensus, then it has become substitutable. And substitutable products are not worth paying twice for.







