The Bulwark (website)
The Bulwark is an American news and opinion website launched in 2018 by Sarah Longwell, with the support of Bill Kristol and Charlie Sykes. It initially launched as a news aggregator but in 2019 was revamped using key staffers from the recently closed The Weekly Standard. The Bulwark is owned by Center Enterprises, Inc., which operates under the trade name Bulwark Media.
The Bulwark has been described as a moderate and center-right publication; it has frequently published pieces critical of US president Donald Trump and his allies. The Bulwark editor Jonathan V. Last in 2025 self-described the publication's mission as promoting and protecting liberal democracy in the United States and internationally.
History
Following the end of publication of The Weekly Standard in December 2018, editor-in-chief Charlie Sykes said that "the murder of the Standard made it urgently necessary to create a home for rational, principled, fact-based center-right voices who were not cowed by Trumpism." The site was created in December 2018 as a news aggregator as a project of the Defending Democracy Together Institute, a 501(c)(3) organization conservative advocacy group led in part by The Weekly Standard co-founder Bill Kristol. Several former editors and writers of The Weekly Standard soon joined the staff and within weeks of launch began publishing original news and opinion pieces. The website has frequently published pieces critical of Donald Trump and of pro-Trump elites in politics and the media.Originally, as a non-profit project, The Bulwark did not run advertising and was supported by donations. By January 2019, approximately $1 million had already been raised for the site, which was said to be adequate to keep the site running for one year. In 2021, The Bulwark launched Bulwark+, a program that provides paid subscribers with "exclusive podcasts, newsletters, and live-streams" for about $100 a year; within a few months, the website reported roughly 16,000 subscribers. Bulwark+ is published on the Substack platform. In February 2025, The Bulwark claimed to have 76,000 paid subscribers to its newsletter and was adding hundreds of new subscribers every few days. More recently, The Bulwark has added video content to their repertoire with a dedicated YouTube page that as of May 2025 has 1.26 million subscribers, and has started reading ads on their podcasts, however Bulwark+ members are able to avoid these ads as a perk of their paid subscription.
In 2021, Washingtonian magazine observed that content on The Bulwark is primarily geared toward readers seeking "serious coverage of events through a center-right filter" but that its editors have sought to attract centrist Democratic readers who may be "uncomfortable with the excesses of the progressive left".
In 2024, Sarah Longwell, Bill Kristol, and Tim Miller sent the Democratic campaign the names of prominent Republicans whom they thought could be persuaded to endorse the Democratic candidate for president. Miller, a former Republican strategist, described his role as "outside cajoler," as he encouraged the Harris campaign to ratchet up its efforts to pitch prominent Republicans on publicly supporting the vice president. In October of that year, William Saletan wrote that Trump was running an "openly fascist campaign".
The Bulwark editor Jonathan V. Last in 2025 self-described the publication's mission as promoting and protecting liberal democracy in the United States and internationally.