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Clifford J. Levy

Clifford J. Levy (born June 15, 1967 in New Rochelle, New York) is deputy publisher of two Times company publications, the Wirecutter and The Athletic.[1][2] He is a two-time Pulitzer Prize winner and considered one of the main architects of the digital transformation of The New York Times.[3][4]

Levy is a graduate of New Rochelle High School and Princeton University in 1989.

New York Times[edit]

Early career[edit]

Levy joined The New York Times as a news assistant in 1990 and was promoted to reporter in 1992. He served as chief of the Albany bureau as a political reporter, City Hall correspondent and Newark correspondent. Beginning in 2000, he was a special projects reporter for the Times' Metro desk.[5] In 2002, he wrote a series "Broken Homes" on the abuse of mentally ill adults in state-regulated homes.[6] In 2003, he won the Pulitzer Prize for investigative reporting,[7] as well as the George Polk Award. He broke a story on New York State Medicaid fraud in 2005.[8]

International reporting[edit]

Levy joined the international staff of the Times in 2006 as Moscow bureau chief.[9][10] He received his second Pulitzer Prize in 2011 in the category of International Reporting for his reporting on corruption in Russia in cooperation with Ellen Barry. The jury cited their "dogged reporting that put a human face on the faltering justice system in Russia, remarkably influencing the discussion inside the country.".[11] Shortly before, in March 2011, Levy was named deputy editor of the Times's Metro section.[5]

Newsroom leadership roles[edit]

In 2013, two years after becoming an editor, Levy became the editorial lead on NYT Now,[12] an app created by The Times that aimed to attract new readers by presenting a curated list of stories for a cheaper price than a full subscription.[13] The Times made the app free in 2015 after acknowledging that it had failed to attract a significant number of new subscribers.[13] In August 2016, the Times shelved the app.[14]


Levy later was promoted to the masthead, serving as assistant managing editor and deputy managing editor,[15][16] overseeing The Times's digital platforms. He led a number of initiatives to push the newsroom to embrace digital innovation and focus on digital audiences, including launching an experiment where editors and reporters were barred from viewing the desktop version of The Times inside the newsroom in order to get them to concentrate on mobile readers.[17]


On at least two occasions, Levy was promoted into roles overseeing troubled parts of the Times. In 2018, he was named editor of the Metro section three months after the former editor, Wendell Jamieson, resigned following an internal investigation.[18][19] In January 2021, Levy returned to the masthead as deputy managing editor, taking on a leadership role advising the audio department a month after the Times admitted to major errors in its flagship "Caliphate" podcast.[20][21] One source told the New York Post that "Cliff was sent there to clean up the mess.”[22]


Levy was reported to have been among several candidates to succeed Dean Baquet as executive editor, but did not receive the role, which went to managing editor Joe Kahn in April 2022.[23]


After Kahn's promotion to executive editor, Levy remained on the Times's masthead as a deputy managing editor with a role said to focus on "ethical standards and journalistic independence, as well as training for editors throughout the newsroom."[24][25]


On December 15, 2022, the Times announced that Levy would leave the newsroom and be appointed deputy publisher of the Wirecutter and The Athletic.[1]

Union negotiation controversy[edit]

Levy was Kahn's representative in contract negotiations with the Times's union, whose contract expired in March 2021.[26] Levy's mass e-mails to Times staff about the bargaining process were challenged by the union.[27] The company's leadership defended him.


On December 7, 2022, Times journalists staged a one-day walk-out to protest what they said was the company's unwillingness to offer fair proposals, including on wages.[28] It was the first such labor action since 2017 and the first to last a day or longer since 1978.[28]


On May 23, 2023, the company and the union announced a deal for a new contract, ending more than two years of contentious negotiations, the Times reported.[29] “This deal is a victory for all union members who fought for a fair contract,” the union said.


Levy said the contract "shows how much we value the contributions of NewsGuild members to The Times’s success.”


On June 6, 2023, the union said more than 99% of members had ratified the contract.[30]  

Family[edit]

Levy is married to the documentary filmmaker Juliane Dressner. They have three children, Danya, Arden and Emmett, and live in Park Slope, Brooklyn. In Park Slope, his children attended P.S. 321.


When Levy and his family lived in Moscow while he was a foreign correspondent, their children were enrolled in a local Russian school called the New Humanitarian School.[31] He wrote about the experience for The New York Times Magazine, and Dressner produced and directed an accompanying short documentary for The Times's website that won a National Magazine Award.[32]

2012 in Video for "My Family's Experiment in Extreme Schooling"[32]

National Magazine Award for Digital Media

2011 [11]

Pulitzer Prize for International Reporting

2010 [33]

George Polk Award for Foreign Reporting

2009 [34]

Robert F. Kennedy Journalism Award

2003 [35] for "Broken Homes"

Pulitzer Prize for Investigative Reporting

2002 George Polk Award for Regional Reporting for "Broken Homes"

[36]

1998 [37]

George Polk Award for Local Reporting