Mobile navigation

News 

The Guardian announces new team

The Guardian has announced the formation of a new US political enterprise team.

The Guardian announces new team
Left: Aram Roston; Right: George Zornick.

The Guardian earlier this month announced it has hired journalist George Zornick to lead its new US political enterprise team. As editor, Zornick will oversee the team’s ambitious investigations examining abuse of power at the federal level and how the decisions and dealings of political figures and institutions impact everyday people, added the publisher. He started on 18 August and reports to the Guardian’s Washington editor, Ankita Rao.

Zornick comes to the Guardian after six years at HuffPost, where he held multiple leadership positions, including most recently chief national editor. During his tenure, the national desk at HuffPost won multiple awards and covered the January 6 insurrection, the pandemic, and Donald Trump’s return to power. Prior to that, he worked at the Nation, starting as an intern and working his way up to be the magazine’s Washington DC editor, and was previously a senior reporter for ThinkProgress.org.

In addition to Zornick, Aram Roston has joined the US political enterprise team as senior reporter and started on 25 August. For more than two decades, Roston has worked as an investigative reporter breaking major stories and features on national security, white collar crime, corruption, privatization and conflict. Roston comes to the Guardian from Reuters, where he has been an investigative reporter since 2019. At Reuters he broke the story that ended Jerry Falwell Jr’s presidency at Liberty University, part of a series that explored the business entanglements of Falwell, one of the most well known evangelical leaders in the US, added the Guardian. He also reported on the far right, national security and intelligence matters. He has previously written for BuzzFeed News – where he covered mercenaries, arms deals and for-profit foster care – as well as GQ, Newsweek, the Nation, and the New York Times. His awards and recognitions include the 2025 Toner Prize, two Emmys, the Daniel Pearl Award for international investigative journalism, the Scripps Howard Award for investigative journalism, and an Investigative Reporters and Editors Award.

George Zornick, the Guardian’s US political enterprise editor said: “At a time when disinformation is rampant, accountability is shrinking, and power is working harder than ever to avoid scrutiny, that’s exactly when journalism has to be at its sharpest. I’m grateful for this opportunity to build the Guardian’s political enterprise team from the ground up, one that will go beyond the horse race to expose what’s real and what matters.”

Aram Roston, the Guardian’s US senior political enterprise reporter said: “I’m honored to join the Guardian as it expands its US presence, digging deeper into the powers secretly shaping our lives. As the stakes for our democracy rise, our responsibility as journalists remains clear: to pursue facts relentlessly, to expose how power operates, and to serve the public with reporting that cuts through fear and spin. That kind of reporting requires investment and support, and it’s encouraging to see the Guardian prioritize such essential work.”

Betsy Reed, the Guardian’s US editor said: “Investigative reporting has always been at the heart of the Guardian’s mission, but never before has the need for accountability journalism – the kind that brings home the stakes for real people in real time – been so acute in our nation’s capital. George Zornick and Aram Roston have both shown through their careers a relentless dedication to chasing and nailing just that kind of story. As we continue to build our political enterprise team, alongside our talented DC bureau of correspondents and investigative reporters, the Guardian will continue to tell the stories the world needs to hear about what’s happening in Washington today.”


Keep up-to-date with publishing news: sign up here for InPubWeekly, our free weekly e-newsletter.