Media

Washington Post staff walks out in their biggest labor protest in 48 years

More than 750 unionized staffers at the Wasꦓhington Post walked off the job Thursday to protest stalled contract talks at the broadsheet owned by billionaire Jeff༺ Bezos, the company said.

The workers planned a day-long picket and rally outside the publication’s Washington, DC, downtown office — the biggest labor protest to hit the company in 48 years — and asked readers to abstain from buying the newspaper or reading its website in solidarity, .

Non-unionized e♊ditors and managers, meanwhile, scrambled to generate💎 content to publish Thursday.

The walkout follows a stalemaﷺte between Washington Post Guild🦹 members and management that has left workers without a contract for 18 months.

“This is a declaration by huꦛndreds of Washington Post ꦗstaffers saying that if the company is to work with us fairly, it has to respect its employees,” Sarah Kaplan, a climate reporter and union steward, told the newspaper.

The union is seeking pay increases of 4% for the next three years, while the company’sﷺ latest offer was 2.25% next year, with 2% increases in 2025 and 2026, .

Unionized staffers walked out Thursday and picketed in front of the Washington Post’s DC headquarters. AFP via Getty Images

“Despite a year and a half of efforts, Post mana൩gement has refused to bargain in go🔴od faith for a fair contract that keeps up with inflation and our competition,” the union said, per the Journal.

According to the pu🐲blication, bargaining over salaries has slowed the process with the Guild, ꧋which is seeking minimums of $100,100 for reporters, for example, while the Post’s latest offer is $73,000.

Other issues inclu🌳de the size of annual cost-of-living raises.

“We respect the rights of our Guild-covered colleagues to engage in this planned one-day strike. We will make sure our readers and customers are as unaffected as possible,” a Washington Post spokesperson told the New York Post on Thursday.

Management said it is open to the Guild’s requests, including longer contracts, adding that its current offer provides “significant” changes to minimum salaries and annual increases that are “more generous than typical Guild contracts signed in the last two decades.”

“The Post has made its last, best and final offer to the Guild,” the paper’s spokesperson said.

“The Post’s goal remains the same as it has from the start of our negotiations: to reach an agreement with the Guild that meets the needs of our employees and the needs of our business.”

Unionized staffers are hoping their 24-hour walkout will result in management returning to the bargaining table for a new contract. X / @APWUnational

In October, the company offered💝 voluntary buyouts in an effort to slash head count by 240.

It said layoffs would follow if the goal is not reached. Editor Sally Buzbee💯 told staffers the reduction is expected to leave the newsroom with 940 journalists, roughly the total it had at the end of 2021.

The guild has called the terms of the buyout offer “stingy.”

Those opting to leave would get base pay ranging from six months to two yearsꦇ, depe🍬nding on how long they have worked there.

Union൲ officials say𓃲 the buyout could be more generous as it is being paid out of a flush pension fund.

So far, roughly 12🅰0 staffers have take♔n the buyout ahead of the mid-December deadline.

The Washington Post Guild’s call to action Thursday as journalists walk out over stalled contract negotiations. X /

Thursday’s walkout comes as the company is about to get a new publisher and CEO.

William Lewis, a British-born veteran medi🥃a executive, will take over Jan. 2.

🌸He most recently worked at the Wall Street Journal.

He was tapped last month to replace Fred Ryan, whose chaoti𓆏c tenure was punctuated by layoffs.

A sweeping walkout hasn’t occurred at the renowned newspaper since 1975, when printing press workers led a strike while shutting down printing operations.

The paper’s then-publisher Katharine Graham hired replacement workꦍers to run the pressᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ𒀱ᩚᩚᩚes, essentially breaking their union, the report said.

The Washington Post work stoppage mirrors the one-day 🌳walkout by more than 1,100 unionized New York Times workers almost a year ඣago to protest deadlocked contract negotiations.

The five months later.