- Joseph Kahn, 57, will take over The New York Times newsroom from Dean Baquet.
- Kahn is a former foreign correspondent in China and international editor.
- Baquet has led the newsroom since 2014 though its digital transformation and coverage of the Trump presidency.
Joseph Kahn, the managing editor of the New York Times and a former foreign correspondent in China and international editor, has been named the next executive editor of newspaper.
Kahn is replacing Dean Baquet, who is set to step down from the role in June, the company said.
The ascension of Kahn, 57, has long been expected. Since 2016, he has served as managing editor under Dean Baquet, who hit the paper's mandatory retirement age of 65 this year after being in the top editorial job at the paper since 2014 and steering the paper through a digital revitalization and the turbulent Trump years. Baquet is staying on at the Times in a different position that the company says will be announced soon.
In the No 2. role, Kahn has focused on shaping how the Times' journalism is presented, like the development of its "Live" breaking news product and the use of graphics and interactives, colleagues say. A former Wall Street Journal business reporter, he is also said to have deeper ties with the business side of the paper than Baquet.
Kahn's colleagues describe him as accomplished, bright, quiet, and a somewhat mysterious figure. He is also the embodiment of a classic New York Timesman: A Harvard-educated, career foreign correspondent from a privileged upbringing. (Kahn's father cofounded Staples.)
Kahn is succeeding Baquet, the Times's first Black executive editor and a deft newsroom politician and schmoozer. Kahn, in contrast, is known to be serious and reserved in professional settings — the kind of colleague who keeps his eyes down on his phone during elevator rides, according to one staffer.
But his journalistic credentials are likewise unquestionable. While the last two Times executive editors — Baquet and Jill Abramson — had deep roots in political and national security reporting, Kahn's background and personal interest is in business and international affairs. In recent weeks, colleagues say he has been involved in the paper's coverage of Ukraine.
Kahn joined the paper in 1998 and distinguished himself as a foreign correspondent and bureau chief in China, sharing in a 2006 Pulitzer Prize for his reporting on China's faulty legal system. After a stint in Washington covering economics and one in New York on the business desk, he moved up the chain through a series of roles overseeing international coverage.
Kahn began his career at The Wall Street Journal and the Dallas Morning News, where he was part of a team that won a Pulitzer Prize for a series of stories about violence against women.
Times insiders say that Kahn is inheriting a paper at an extremely challenging moment for its internal culture, particularly in the wake of an internal flare-up over how the paper covers race — and how staffers from non-traditional backgrounds are treated within the paper — following the murder of George Floyd in 2020.
Kahn has put himself at the center of conversations surrounding diversity, and he was one of the top editors involved in an internal report delving into how the Times can become a more inclusive workplace.
Kahn is, however, an old-school news editor, insiders say. And they believe that he is ideologically aligned with A.G. Sulzberger — the publisher and scion of the family that controls the paper — in thinking that the institution needs to be careful to resist becoming too captive to its left-leaning readers as well as its most vocal, often younger staffers agitating for a more progressive news approach.
In recent months, the paper has set up a new editorial standards team focusing on reader trust that some view as laying that groundwork to reposition the paper toward the center, politically. Some in the newsroom expect Kahn will also focus on how reporters use social media, particularly Twitter, following the paper's new call for reporters to "reset" how they use the platform.
"He's kind of like a no-nonsense person," said one Times insider of Kahn. "For good and bad, Dean has a real softness about him. I think Joe might be more likely to enforce some of these norms around how we express ourselves."
A. G. Sulzberger, Times publisher and chairman of The New York Times Company, said in a statement that the paper "couldn't ask for a better leader for our newsroom amid a historic convergence of events."
"Joe brings impeccable news judgment, a sophisticated understanding of the forces shaping the world and a long track record of helping journalists produce their most ambitious and courageous work," Sulzberger said in the statement.
This is a developing story...