James Bennet

James Bennet is the former editor in chief and co-president of The Atlantic. Under Bennet’s leadership from 2006 to 2016, The Atlantic dramatically increased its editorial reach and impact while returning to profitability for the first time in recent history. Adweek and Ad Age named him editor of the year in 2012 and 2009 respectively, and the magazine was honored with the National Magazine Award four times during his tenure, including magazine of the year and best website, for TheAtlantic.com. A former White House correspondent and Jerusalem bureau chief for The New York Times, Bennet is also the president of the American Society of Magazine Editors.

Latest

  1. The American Idea at War

    One can draw a line from September 11, 2001, straight back to the decisions made by colonial mapmakers as the fighting raged in Europe 100 years ago.

    Bettmann/Corbis
  2. The Bloomberg Way

    The mayor of New York on his soda ban, why he doesn't worry about approval ratings, governing in the age of Twitter, and the dumbed-down media

    Jake Chessum
  3. The New Price of American Politics

    Not since the Gilded Age has our politics been opened so wide to corporate contributions and donations from secret sources. And the new era of big money has just begun. Jim Bopp, its intellectual architect, believes this is a good thing—the more money, the better, he says. Reformers (and most voters) disagree. Their battle is over the most-basic ideas of our democracy; at stake—according to both sides—is either the revitalization of politics, or its final capture by the powerful.

    Cliff Owen/AP