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Bari Weiss has appointed Shayndi Raice as CBS News' new foreign editor, aligning with her pro-Israel stance. This follows the ousting of veteran bureau chief Claire Day amid tensions over Middle East coverage.
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Bari Weiss, the CBS News boss, has ousted a veteran bureau chief following tensions over coverage of the Middle East and brought in a new foreign editor who, according to sources, is more aligned with Weiss’s pro-Israel agenda.
Paramount, which owns CBS, announced on Wednesday that it had hired Shayndi Raice, a Wall Street Journal editor who most recently served as the paper’s deputy bureau chief for the Middle East and north Africa, based in Israel. Raice will move to London, where she’ll oversee the network’s international coverage in a newly created position, the company said. In a social media post, Weiss called Raice “a scoophound reporter, a brilliant editor, and a clear-eyed leader”.
The announcement followed reports that CBS News had ousted Claire Day, the London bureau chief and a 25-year veteran of the network, reportedly over clashes about the network’s coverage of Israel’s wars in Gaza and Iran.
At the journal, Raice had a reputation as “much more sympathetic to the Israeli perspective than the Palestinian [one]”, a former colleague told the Guardian. Her approach often led to “friction” with colleagues, they added. Other sources said colleagues concerned with what they saw as a pro-Israel slant repeatedly flagged concerns to the paper’s standards team. Journal leadership, for instance, learned that Raice’s sister-in-law was a settler living in the West Bank, but concluded that it created no conflict. They also said that a review of the paper’s coverage of the conflict under her leadership found an over-reliance on Israeli sources and analysts.
CBS did not respond to a request for comment; the journal and Raice did not provide comment.
The move is the latest effort by Weiss, who was hired to lead the storied network in the fall despite having no broadcast experience, to overhaul CBS News. Her seven-month tenure has been marred by staff pushback and plunging morale, including after her decision late last year to pull a segment about abuses at the Cecot prison in El Salvador shortly before it aired. The segment aired several weeks later, after engulfing Weiss with accusations that she had compromised the network’s reputation for independence by carrying water for the Trump administration. She has overseen several rounds of at the network and several high-profile departures, as well as ratings.
Shayndi Raice is the newly appointed foreign editor at CBS News, overseeing international coverage from London.
Claire Day was ousted reportedly due to tensions over the network's coverage of Israel's conflicts in Gaza and Iran.
Raice's pro-Israel perspective may influence CBS News' coverage of Middle Eastern issues, potentially leading to bias concerns.

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Weiss, a self-declared “Zionist fanatic” and vocal supporter of the administration’s war in Iran, has long accused the media of an anti-Israel bias. The publication she founded, the Free Press, which was bought by Paramount last year for around $150mn, frequently publishes articles and opinion with a marked pro-Israel slant.
CBS is hardly the only media organisation dealing with tensions over Israel. Earlier this week, Mathias Döpfner, the CEO of Politico’s parent company, Berlin-based Axel Springer, said on a call with staff that anyone who did not share the company’s views – including its support for “Israel’s right to exist” – should “work for other companies”.