Kinsley next moved to the
Los Angeles Times as editorial page editor in April 2004. He maintained his Seattle residence and often worked from there, commuting to Los Angeles on a part-time basis. During his tenure, Kinsley tried to overhaul the paper's editorial page and led an abortive experiment with a
Wikitorial, while also receiving criticism from
USC professor and
feminist advocate Susan Estrich alleging a dearth of editorials written by women. Kinsley announced his departure in September 2005 after a falling out with the publisher. He returned to writing a weekly column for
The Washington Post and
Slate, and in 2006 he served briefly as American editor of
The Guardian. He also became a regular columnist for
Time magazine, but in May 2009 wrote that the magazine had "dumped" him. On September 9, 2010, Kinsley and
MSNBC pundit
Joe Scarborough joined the staff of
Politico as the publication's first opinion columnists. On April 29, 2011,
Bloomberg L.P. announced that Kinsley had joined the Bloomberg View editorial board. In January 2013, Kinsley re-joined
The New Republic as editor at large. In January 2014,
Vanity Fair announced that Kinsley would become a contributing editor and write a monthly column. ==Personal life==