The Washington Times had a major shakeup in top management last night, with three executives leaving the company. TPM has also learned that Executive Editor John Solomon, hired in January 2008, may also be leaving the newspaper.
Solomon declined to comment this morning when reached by TPMDC.
Solomon, who was hired away from the Washington Post and spent more than a decade with the Associated Press, could not be reached for comment today, but two newsroom sources said they expect him to resign.
David Jones, managing editor of The Times, said this morning that Solomon "is taking a few days to consider his options." Management plans to brief staffers on the changes today. The Times did announce that Publisher Tom McDevitt, Chief Finance Officer Keith Cooperrider and Chairman Doug Joo are leaving.
Jones said that Jonathan Slevin, a vice president at the paper, is now acting president and publisher.
Solomon was named executive editor at the newspaper in January 2008. Here's the introduction he gave to the Times newsroom after joining the newspaper.
Solomon is considered by newsroom staffers as aggressive but has also earned praise from Washington, D.C. news executives as he has added reporters to the paper. He has recruited two Washington Post staffers, Jeff Birnbaum and Matthew Mosk, to top positions at The Times. Since joining the paper, Solomon has helped create a radio program and invested heavily in the Web site.
On the staff shakeup, Marketing Director Karen Gruenberg told TPM this morning, "I don't have any more information than what you do."
Late Update: Here's the official announcement from the newspaper.
Washington Times to Assess Positioning in Response to Market Changes;
New Management Team to Focus on Sustainability PlanningWASHINGTON, DC - The Washington Times LLC today announced that it is continuing on its path toward a sustainable multimedia news enterprise involving leadership expertise from within The Washington Times and directed by its Board of Directors and its parent company, News World Communications LLC.
Today's industry conditions and the general economic downturn necessitate this team-based assessment, planning, and subsequent implementation of a plan to enable The Times to become a sustainable multimedia company in today's challenging news industry environment.
Jonathan Slevin has been named Acting President and Publisher of The Washington Times. Tatum executive services and other specialists are providing assistance to a new Washington Times leadership team. The process will clarify the steps needed to achieve the goal of a market-based, financially sustainable media enterprise.
Mr. Slevin previously served as a vice president of The Washington Times, was managing editor of the New York City Tribune, held executive business management positions in other industries, and is the author of several books. He comes from a journalism family that includes his late father, a reporter on the political economy and former president of The National Press Club, his cousin who was formerly editorial page editor of The Los Angeles Times, and his uncle, editor in chief of The Baltimore Sun and a Pulitzer-prize winning reporter in international affairs.
Thomas P. McDevitt has been relieved of his duties as president and publisher of The Washington Times. Keith Cooperrider, former chief financial officer of The Washington Times, has also been relieved of his duties, as well as Dong Moon Joo, who was serving in a titular role as chairman.
"The Washington Times values the highest standards of journalism and a commitment to serving the citizens of our democratic form of government with the news they need to make informed decisions on matters in our vital collective and personal interests," said Slevin. "Our assessment team looks forward to emerging with a market-based plan that supports the sustainability of The Washington Times and advances the Times' role as an important source of news and opinion for readers who value a diversity of information and analysis."
Late Late Update: Over at the Politico, Michael Calderone notes there's been "speculation that changes at the Times could be associated with last month's handover of power in the Unification Church, the paper's owner. The Rev. Sun Myung Moon, who turns 90 in January, handed over power to his three sons."

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rynato
November 9, 2009 9:32 AM
Maybe Rev. Moon is tired of pissing away so much money on this propaganda sheet?
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Rich
November 9, 2009 9:46 AM
His kids, like the second generation of many business families want more profit and will do anything, sensible or otherwise to make that heppen.
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jjcomet
November 9, 2009 9:50 AM in reply to Rich
While that's generally a bad thing, in this instance I can't help hoping they run the rag into the ground in record time...
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mycomment
November 9, 2009 9:50 AM
rupert's nypost ain't doing so well, either:
Nearly every paper in America has lost circulation, but The Post more than most — down almost 30 percent in 2.5 years, to 508,000 in the most recent reporting period, against 544,000 for The Daily News. The slide accelerated after The Post’s price returned to 50 cents last year. And this year, The Daily News has surged far ahead in online readership.
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/11/09/business/media/09post.html
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LarsThorwald
November 9, 2009 10:03 AM
The Washington Times begins unraveling at the seams, and our own Josh Marshall, publisher of a new media model, dines with the President.
Sometimes I so savor the little things.
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Why oh why
November 9, 2009 10:27 AM in reply to LarsThorwald
Has the other other Times ever "raveled"?
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Overreach THIS!
November 9, 2009 10:55 AM in reply to Why oh why
Yeah, good one!
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jzap
November 9, 2009 5:26 PM in reply to Overreach THIS!
Does it even have seams?
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slb
November 9, 2009 3:15 PM in reply to Why oh why
It is, of course, one of the goofy quirks of the English language that "ravel" and "unravel" mean exactly the same thing.
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Overreach THIS!
November 9, 2009 5:49 PM in reply to slb
Here's a good one for you: in U.S. English the word "quite" means something like "very" or something like "completely."
In British English it means "moderately" or "somewhat."
Eng. cook to Yank: Did you enjoy the stew?
Yank: It was quite good!
Eng.cook: ** slow burn! **
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Xantar
November 9, 2009 10:48 AM in reply to LarsThorwald
And Josh snatched away a reporter from the Times to boot (although I'm still reserving judgment on Christina).
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juanensalada
November 9, 2009 10:07 AM
The Full Moonie!
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slb
November 9, 2009 3:16 PM in reply to juanensalada
Badda-bing!
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The Commenter Formerly Known as NCSteve
November 9, 2009 11:07 AM
God, I hope this doesn't mean he'll go back to reporting again. His Solomon Specials ("investigative" reporting on pedestrian business transactions by Democrats laced with heavy insinuation of scandal but no actual scandal) used to spike my blood pressure on a regular basis.
OMFG! John Edwards sold his D.C. house at the height of the housing bubble for more than he paid for it!
OMFG! Harry Reid transferred land he owned to an LLC partnership, which sold the land to developers and then passed Reid's share of the profits back to Reid!
OMFG! Obama bought a house in Chicago and paid fair market value for a strip of land on an adjacent lot purchased by shady character Rezko!
In Solomonworld, it was like any kind of a business transaction more complex than buying the Number 1 value meal at McDonald's was inherently suspect and almost certainly evidence of rot and corruption if a Democrat was involved but, somehow, the vast open sewer of corruption that was the Republican Congress and Executive branch under Bush didn't provoke so much as a sniff.
Hopefully, Murdoch will give him a job editing his faiing New York rag.
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Peter Principle
November 9, 2009 11:30 AM
He has recruited two Washington Post staffers, Jeff Birnbaum and Matthew Mosk, to top positions at The Times.
I thought I was cynical, but I gotta admit that first name surprised me. Birnbaum's not someone I would have expected to sell his journalistic ass to the likes of Rev. Moon. Guess the price was too high to resist.
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Peter Principle
November 9, 2009 11:33 AM
"Today's industry conditions and the general economic downturn necessitate this team-based assessment, planning, and subsequent implementation of a plan to enable The Times to become a sustainable multimedia company in today's challenging news industry environment."
Translation: Even Rev. Moon, crazy as he is, isn't going to go on shoveling vast quantities of cash into a glorified vanity publishing operation forever.
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NotaGOP
November 9, 2009 12:17 PM in reply to Peter Principle
Especially when the current administration is *definitely* not reading it, & the smart people in the opposition are giving it less attention. Further, I'm sure both parties can find more pleasant sources for paper to line their birdcages & garbage cans than this rag.
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Scott in PacNW
November 9, 2009 11:44 AM
I think the question is (1) Where was Rev Moon's money coming from all those years? (2) Why's it stopping now?
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Cal Gal
November 9, 2009 12:11 PM
It has ALWAYS bugged me to see this piece of cult toilet paper referred to as if it were something else, like a real "newspaper."
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Tom Betz
November 9, 2009 12:12 PM
KCIA? Yakuza? Moonies selling ginseng and flowers?
Moon's kids probably aren't the intelligence asset that Moon was.
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tosh
November 9, 2009 12:32 PM
I hate to ask... but why is TPM wasting time covering the Washington Times? They simply aren't relevant. I also doubt most of your readers really care about the trails and tribulations of a conservative hack like John Solomon.
Come on fellows, there's lots of other stuff to cover out there. Between this and covering the sinkhole campaign of Linda McMahon, I'm starting to think you guys have way too much time on your hands at TPM Tower. ;)
John
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fkaZk0sm0
November 9, 2009 12:48 PM in reply to tosh
wrong.
understanding and documenting the right's disinformation machinery is probably one of the most important subjects deserving coverage. and john solomon is a subject that tpm readers have been following for years now. and fits perfectly with josh's editiorial direction from the very beginning of tpm.
i do wish folks would stop with the 'don't write about this' and 'don't write about that' crap already. tpm has the resources to cover plenty of stories and unlimited room on their website to publish them.
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jzap
November 9, 2009 5:29 PM in reply to fkaZk0sm0
+1
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PeachesNYC
November 9, 2009 1:06 PM in reply to tosh
Schadenfreude?
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Otani
November 9, 2009 6:02 PM
I'm not precisely sure why people seem gleeful at the notion of the Times having trouble. I'm not a fan of the paper either, but it happens to employ a good number of people, many of whom do some very good work. We shouldn't be celebrating the possible loss of hundreds of jobs just because we happen to disagree with a publication's editorial slant or ownership.
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Cal Damage
November 9, 2009 8:17 PM in reply to Otani
And closing Gitmo would be such a shame, all those jobs for cooks launderers and janitors and construction workers, lost...
And don't tell me it's not the same thing. The Times cheered every day of the Bush Administration's use of the Constitution as a doormat.
>Please note the restraint I used by referring to our own horror show, and not to the construction workers, clerks, etc., who found employ in similar establishments, in other countries, in other wars...
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JNagarya
November 11, 2009 3:19 AM in reply to Otani
It's a healthy sign when a far-right lunatic fringe America-hating propaganda operation stumbles, falls, and fails.
I have little sympathy for those who were complicit in keeping it going.
But let's all donate our spare change to impoverished Rupert Murdoch so he can buy up and destroy more legitimate media.
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readytoblowagasket
November 10, 2009 8:50 AM
Snore.
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