Origins, style, and growth Politico was founded in 2007 to focus on politics with fast-paced Internet reporting in granular detail, comparable to the sports analysis of
SportsCenter or
ESPN.
John F. Harris and
Jim VandeHei left
The Washington Post to become
Politicos editor-in-chief and executive editor, respectively. With the financial backing of
Robert L. Allbritton, the pair launched the website on January 23, 2007. Their first hire was
Mike Allen, a writer for
Time, and
Frederick J. Ryan Jr. was its first president and chief executive officer.
Martin Tolchin was another member of the editorial founding team. From the beginning, journalists covering political campaigns for
Politico carried a video camera to each assignment, and they were encouraged to promote their work elsewhere. By 2008,
Politico received more than three million unique visits per month. In September 2008,
The New York Times reported that
Politico would expand its operations following the
2008 U.S. presidential election, and that "after Election Day, [
Politico] will add reporters, editors, Web engineers and other employees; expand circulation of its newspaper edition in Washington; and print more often." Between the 2008 and
2012 elections,
Politicos staff more than tripled in size. Notable additions included two political commentators,
Michael Kinsley and
Joe Scarborough, as opinion writers. In 2009, the web pages shortened their name from
The Politico to more simply
Politico. In 2011,
Politico began to focus more on
long-form journalism and news analysis. This shift in coverage received further support in June 2013 with the hiring of
Susan Glasser to oversee "opinion from prominent outside voices" and "long-form storytelling". In September 2014, Glasser was tapped to be
Politicos new editor, following the resignation of Richard Berke the previous month. VandeHei was named
Politicos new CEO in October 2013. Under his leadership,
Politico continued to grow: in 2014 alone, it expanded revenues by 25%. By 2016,
Politico had nearly 500 employees worldwide. Amidst reports of tensions, VandeHei and Allen announced that they would leave
Politico after the
2016 presidential election, but left far sooner. Allbritton, then Executive Chairman and owner, was named acting CEO in Vandehei's stead. Investment banker Patrick Steel was CEO between 2017 and 2021. He departed the company in early 2021 after four years. Goli Sheikholeslami, who had been the CEO of
WNYC public radio, was announced as CEO by new owner Axel Springer in January 2022 and tasked with leading operations of both
Politico and
Politico Europe.
Dafna Linzer, who had been at MSNBC and NBC News, was named as the new executive editor in March 2022. She departed in 2023 after a year in the role.
Global expansion In September 2014,
Politico formed a joint venture with German publisher
Axel Springer SE to launch its European edition, based in
Brussels. In December 2014, the joint venture announced its acquisition of Development Institute International, a leading French events content provider, and
European Voice, a European political newspaper, to be re-launched under the
Politico brand.
Politico Europe debuted in print on April 23, 2015.
Politico.eu, the publication's Brussels-based European operation, was formally launched in 2015. In early 2016, it had about 50 editorial employees and two dozen business employees. A third-party survey published at the time ranked Politico.eu as most widely read news organization among 249 Brussels "influencers" surveyed, although the same panel found it less influential than
The Financial Times,
BBC, and
The Economist. Stephen Brown, who was named editor-in-chief of
Politico Europe in September 2019, died suddenly of a heart attack on March 18, 2021. Jamil Anderlini, previously Asia Editor of the
Financial Times, was named Editor-in-Chief of Politico Europe in July 2021. In late 2024 it was announced that Anderlini would move into the role of Regional Director of
Politico's European operation. Kate Day was appointed Senior Executive Editor of the European operation of
Politico in late 2024. In December 2020,
Politico acquired E&E News, an energy and environment-focused publication that targets government agencies, think tanks, and corporations. The terms of the acquisition were not made public.
Focus on investigations Under Glasser and successor
Carrie Budoff Brown,
Politico expanded its focus on investigating Washington policymakers. A series of stories by Sherman and Palmer in 2015 "helped break open the scandal that forced the resignation of Representative
Aaron Schock of Illinois in 2015", according to
The New York Times. Reporter Marianne Levine in 2017 "helped bring down Trump's Labor Secretary pick,"
Andy Puzder, after breaking the story that Puzder's ex-wife had accused him of spousal abuse, according to the
Poynter Institute. Puzder withdrew his nomination after the story. In September 2017, reporters Rachana Pradhan and Dan Diamond authored a "bombshell" investigation of how President
Donald Trump's health secretary,
Tom Price, was flying on charter jets paid for by taxpayers, according to the
Washington Post. Price resigned after the stories. The "indispensable" stories published by
Politico under Budoff Brown in 2017 helped it "get its groove back," according to the
Washingtonians Andrew Beaujon.
Politico reporter
Alex Thompson in February 2022 broke the "bombshell report" of how
Eric Lander, President
Joe Biden's science adviser, had been "demeaning" colleagues in the office, according to
Endpoints News. Lander resigned after the story.
Acquisition by Axel Springer In October 2021, the large German publishing and media firm
Axel Springer SE announced that it had completed the acquisition of
Politico for over $1 billion. The closing took place in late October 2021. The new owners said they would add staff, and at some point, put the publication's news content behind a
paywall. Axel Springer's Chief Executive
Mathias Döpfner said that Politico staff would need to adhere to Axel Springer's principles, including support for a united Europe and
Israel's right to exist, advocate the transatlantic alliance between the United States of America and Europe and a free-market economy, and that staff who disagree with the principles "should not work for Axel Springer, very clearly". Axel Springer said that they would not require
Politico employees to sign documents in support of a
transatlantic alliance or Israel, though this policy is enforced at German newspaper
Bild, another Axel Springer subsidiary. In September 2022,
Politico published an exposé critical of NGO leadership at the helm of the worldwide
COVID-19 pandemic response, written in cooperation with the German newspaper
Die Welt, another Axel Springer property. In May 2025, Argentine entrepreneur and Axel Springer board member Martín Varsavsky resigned after accusing
Politico of left-wing bias. Varsavsky cited
Politico’s news coverage of Israel during the
Gaza war.
Supreme Court leak On May 2, 2022,
Politico obtained and released a 98-page draft document indicating that the
Supreme Court was poised to strike down the landmark
Roe v. Wade decision that legalized abortion nationwide, as well as
Planned Parenthood v. Casey, in its ruling on ''
Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization''.
Chief Justice John Roberts directed the
Marshal of the Court to conduct an investigation into the source of the
leak. The story became the most-trafficked in the publisher's history, with 11 million views by May 6.
Politicos first tweet on the report gained more than triple the impressions it normally saw in an entire month on Twitter.
Loss of workstation at the Pentagon On January 31, 2025, a
Defense Department memo announced that
Politico must move out of its longtime workspace on the Correspondents' Corridor in the Pentagon, a move under a new Annual Media Rotation Program for the Pentagon Press Corps.
Use of artificial intelligence In 2024,
Politico published
AI-generated news summaries of major U.S. political events such as the
Democratic National Convention and the
presidential debates.
Wired reported that
Politico AI tool had fabricated quotes, misspelled names and used language that violated
Politico editorial standards, including the use of terms such as "criminal migrants". The errors were later taken down without a correction from an editor. In March 2025,
Politico unveiled Policy Intelligence Assistant, a suite of AI tools for use by paying subscribers. Executive Rachel Loeffler described the initiative as "seamlessly integrating generative AI with our unmatched policy expertise." == Publications ==