The Weekly Standard, a conservative Trump critic, will shut down
The Weekly Standard, the conservative political and cultural magazine, will shut down after its last issue appears on Monday, the chief executive of its parent company said Friday.
The Washington-based magazine’s 35-member editorial staff will be laid off as a result, said Ryan McKibben, the head of Clarity Media Group, the Colorado company that owns the Standard and its sister publication, the Washington Examiner newspaper.
“This was a business decision,” McKibben said. “As we looked at all of our options, we saw we were facing a steady decline in revenues and circulation. That drove us to our decision to close this week. ... It was a tough decision.”
Staffers who were told of the closure by McKibben at a morning meeting on Friday were skeptical of the business rationale, saying Clarity has invested heavily in the Examiner, with far greater losses than those produced by the Weekly Standard.
Several noted the timing of the closure announcement, calling it “the Christmas massacre.”
The Standard was founded in 1995 by three journalists, Bill Kristol, Fred Barnes and John Podhoretz, with funding from conservative media mogul Rupert Murdoch. Murdoch sold his interest to billionaire Philip Anschutz in 2009.
At its peak, the magazine’s circulation topped 100,000. But it has been in steady decline in recent years, losing about half its circulation and revenue since Clarity, owned by Anschutz, took it over, McKibben said.
It became an influential “thought” journal among neoconservatives, particularly during George W. Bush’s presidential administration, during which it strongly backed the U.S. invasion of Iraq.
However, the magazine has not been profitable throughout its existence.
Clarity tried to sell the Weekly Standard earlier this year, but was unable to find a “viable” buyer, according to McKibben.
Kristol, the magazine’s top editor for more than two decades before becoming a contributing writer two years ago, said last week that he’d received “expressions of interest” from would-be buyers, but no firm offers.
Clarity is revamping the Examiner’s weekly magazine and will offer a subscription to it to the Weekly Standard’s subscribers. The latter magazine has about 50,000 weekly print subscribers and attracts about 2 million unique visitors per month on its website. McKibben said the decision to close the Weekly Standard was unrelated to the operation of the Examiner. “They are stand-alone businesses,” he said.
In the Trump era, the Weekly Standard has differentiated itself from other conservative publications, including the Examiner, by maintaining a skeptical and sometimes oppositional tone regarding the president.
Under Kristol’s successor, Steven Hayes, it has maintained its traditional criticism of Democrats while publishing a number of investigative and feature stories critical of Trump.
The printed magazine, which is published 48 times a year, has lost about 10% of its circulation during the Trump era.
Employees have been told they will receive severance pay in exchange for signing a non-disclosure and non-disparagement agreement.
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