- Patrick B. Pexton
- Ombudsman
As the Washington Post ombudsman, Patrick Pexton represents readers who have concerns or complaints on topics including accuracy, fairness, ethics and the newsgathering process. He also serves as The Post’s internal critic and strives to promote public understanding of the newspaper, its Web site and journalism more generally. He operates under a contract with The Post that guarantees him independence. Pexton has been a reporter and editor for 28 years. He came to The Post from National Journal, where he was deputy editor, the No. 2 job at the nonpartisan weekly magazine about politics and government. Before National Journal, Pexton worked for the Army Times Publishing Co., where he was an editor, chief Pentagon correspondent and an investigative reporter. He played a key role in uncovering two national stories about the U.S. Navy: the Tailhook sexual harassment scandal and the widespread cheating by midshipmen at the U.S. Naval Academy. At the beginning of his career, Pexton worked at the Shoreline Times newspapers in Southern Connecticut and the Journal newspapers in the Washington suburbs. A Los Angeles native, Pexton graduated from Claremont McKenna College and earned a master’s degree from the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS). He can be reached at 202.334.7582 or ombudsman@washpost.com.
- ‘Spoiling’ the Olympics with real-time news
- Leaks bill: bad for journalism, bad for the public
- Railroad company cries foul over Post story on North Dakota oil boom
- Insecure reporters need to stiffen their backbone
- Photos of James Holmes draw readers’ ire
- The Post neglects protesters
- Reader Meter: Post coverage of bus bombing of Israelis was too little, too late
- The Post’s more opinionated front page
- Reader Meter: Cleaning up from the derecho storm
- Was climate-change poll biased?
- Storm coverage: The Post didn’t pass the test
- Romney vs. The Post on outsourcing
- Mitt Romney campaign’s criticism of The Post
- Mitt Romney’s energy evolution: Did The Post mislead readers?
- Van Jones defended; Dana Milbank attacked
- Is The Post going after Jim Graham?
- The thoughtful Americans who are never heard
- The art of The Washington Post home page
- Is The Post anti-Catholic?
- Information technology rules The Post
- Mitt Romney bullying story holds up to scrutiny
- Post Roast: Another big change with no warning
- Mitt Romney’s record as governor and his ideological journey
- Mitt Romney: Ready for his close-up
- The Post fails a young blogger
- Debating the cost of Obamacare
- Does The Post ignore area Congress members?
- Reader Meter: Upset over self-immolation photo
- Post Roast: Marion Barry in green and black-and-white
- The Post should moderate its comments gently
- Post Roast: Ethnic identity and Trayvon Martin’s shooter
- Is a paywall coming to The Washington Post?
- Journalists must be the un-Limbaugh
- Post readers feel ignored
- D.C. homicides: When is a murder case ‘solved’?
- Origins of e-mail: My mea culpa
- Reader Meter: Who really invented e-mail?
- Caving to China’s demands
- Does The Post rely too much on wire services?
- Reader Meter: Obama’s contraception rule right here in D.C.
- Post Roast: The cheek squeeze that roiled the world
- What buyouts reveal about The Washington Post’s strategy
- Reader Meter: Throwing stones at granite story
- Post videos, turning readers into viewers
- Obama the most polarizing president? Maybe not.
- Polygamists and Scientologists in The Post
- An incomplete picture of the March for Life
- Reader Meter: Was Obama really ‘testy’ with Brewer?
- Post Roast: Oops from the Ombudsman
- Scrutinize President Obama’s record
- Reader Meter: Ticked off at Post price increase and missing information
- Occupy D.C.: A protest that deserves The Post’s attention
- Post Roast: Motley headlines
- Is The Post innovating too fast?
- Reader Meter: Dead babies, and racism
- The year in corrections
- Reader Meter: Pink taxis anyone? Or how about religion instead of faith?
- Post Roast: Mitt Romney and the KKK slogan
- Reader Meter: Foreign protests, Virginia Tech shooting, and that sticky Post Web site
- Getting ahead of the facts on Iran
- Community activists give The Post a failing grade
- Reader Meter: Ezra Klein’s ‘briefing’ for Democrats; Aaron Blake’s tweeting for dirt on Gingrich
- Post Roast: Coverage of White House shooting aimed too low
- Post reporters, shining a light on the Solyndra scandal
- Was George Will influenced by his wife’s work for the GOP?
- Reader Meter: Searching in vain for Petri’s humor and for the non-secret ballot.
- Post Roast: Where was the coverage of Maryland’s municipal elections?
- The Post’s coverage of the Penn State story relied too heavily on columnists
- Reader Meter: Mean AARP, evil pipelines, naughty upskirts, and still, slow loads
- Post Roast: Jennifer Rubin’s retweet
- Reader Meter: The Hermanator and ‘The Post’s’ Matt Patterson
- Did a Social Security story go too far?
- Post Roast: Ombudsman shortchanged Post researchers
- Reader Meter: Hatchets, tweets, kitties, and stickers
- The story behind the Marco Rubio story
- Post Roast: GOP field not so unified on Iraq
- Did The Post story do right by the Koch brothers?
- Reader Meter: Profanity, the 99%, and the 9-9-9
- Profanity and The Post: The nays have it
- Post Roast: Getting the name wrong, and other copy-editing blunders
- Profanity in The Post
- Reader Meter: Crosswords, Gary Johnson, and faster and more furious
- Did The Post single-track the Orange Line chaos?
- Paratroopers invade The Post
- Behind the Rick Perry hunting camp story
- Reader Meter: Rick Perry, Fast and Furious, and problems reporting problems
- Missing facts in Post stories
- Post Roast: Scalia not dead, but bodies usually are
- Another look at Justice Dept.’s $16 muffin
- Reader Meter: Protests, myths, and picking fights
- Copycat stories in The Post and the New York Times
- The Post’s new mobile Going Out Guide
- Post Roast: Confusing farmer almanacs
- Post Web site loads too slowly
- Reader Meter: Middle East, drones, and bias
- Faces of the Fallen, back in action
- Online comments: Constructive forum or mindless sniping?
- Post Roast: Correcting a correction
- The Post, at your doorstep by 6 a.m.
- Plagiarism or poor attribution?
- Digital publishing gets transparent at The Washington Post
- Social media guidelines: The Post’s and others’
- Post pulling back from suburbs?
- Post stories on Ron Paul
- Does Ron Paul deserve more coverage?
- E-mail brings a blue streak of hate-filled profanity
- Post stories on ATF’s Fast and Furious
- Slow on the draw on Fast and Furious?
- A populist future for The Post
- The furor over a Post opinion blogger’s quick reaction on Norway
- Post’s coverage of first ladies riles readers
- The Post vs. HUD on the HOME story
- Playing whack-an-ad at The Post
- At The Post, reporters get socialized to social media
- Why did The Post deport Jose Antonio Vargas’s story?
- McIlroy’s victory inspires double spittoons
- The truth about the Sarah Palin e-mails
- Women’s sports coverage lacking
- Crowd-sourcing the Palin e-mails
- Post misses boat on waterfront controversy
- A freelancer rips off a documentary for a Post Travel article
- Post’s reporting on SEAL Team 6 provokes cries of ‘treason’
- A journalist’s No. 1 ‘platform-neutral’ duty
- Making The Post a go-to for ‘Local’
- Morbidly obese or ‘mega-fatties’?
- Chocolate milk or the mayor’s arrest?
- David Broder, a ‘brand’ worth replicating
- A guide to navigating The Post’s new Web site
- Behind The Post’s redesigned Web site
- The damage done by Post reporter Sari Horwitz’s plagiarism
- For a new ombudsman, a flood of e-mail and calls
- In Egypt, Post journalists’ courage in covering a revolution
- About Patrick Pexton
The Post MostMost-viewed stories, videos, and galleries in the past two hours
Real Wheels Live
Live Q&A, 11 a.m. ET
Join this live online discussion with Real Wheels columnist Warren Brown about car-buying and the auto industry.
| 12:00 PM | Carolyn Hax Live: Advice columnist tackles your problems (Friday, August 17) |
|---|---|
| 1:00 PM | The Latest in TV with Lisa de Moraes LIVE NOW |


