Louisa Loveluck, whose team was named a Pulitzer Prize finalist for reporting on Gaza, has received several editor’s notes after others discovered errors in her reporting
A Washington Post reporter known for writing error-ridden anti-Israel stories has officially left the paper after announcing that she had been laid off in February.
Louisa Loveluck, a former Al Jazeera correspondent who most recently wrote for the Post from London, posted a note on X marking “Termination day.”
“A lay-off is a funny thing,” Loveluck wrote. “10 years of your life and then someone just cuts the bungee cord, without a thank you, goodbye, or even a chance to bid farewell to the constellation of colleagues who inhabited your world all that time. I’m grateful for all the opportunities the Washington Post gave me, and for the friends I made along the way. Onwards.”
![]()
Loveluck, one of many Al Jazeera veterans who populated the Post’s foreign desk, has a long and documented history of publishing false information that portrays Israel in a negative light and Hamas in a positive one. In August, Loveluck wrote a story headlined, “Palestinians mourn Al Jazeera journalist Anas al-Sharif, crew in Gaza,” who had been killed in a targeted Israeli strike. The Israel Defense Forces, though, discovered documents that identified the Al Jazeera “journalist” as a leader in a Hamas rocket-launching squad and a member of the commando unit behind the Oct. 7, 2023, attacks.
Loveluck was one of four reporters on a story from last June that accused Israel of killing “over 30” Gazans near a U.S. aid site without making clear that the claim came from Hamas and without giving equal weight to claims from Israeli officials. After changing the story without affixing a correction note to its website, the Post eventually released a statement saying that Loveluck’s story “fell short of Post standards of fairness and should not have been published in that form.”
The former London correspondent made headlines for delivering an anti-Israel diatribe to the Post newsroom after her reporting team was named a Pulitzer Prize finalist for reporting on the Israel-Hamas war.
“Two million civilians are trapped there through no fault of their own,” Loveluck said of Gaza. “The life they lead there is a nightmare. The level of suffering is so grave that we have often struggled to find the words.”
Jewish Insider reported that several colleagues took issue with the fact that Loveluck omitted Hamas and the terror group’s Israeli hostages in her remarks.
Loveluck was the lead reporter on a now heavily edited story alleging that Israel had a policy of separating Palestinian mothers from their premature infants. An editor’s note that now appears at the top of the piece reveals that she and the other reporters “incorrectly said that all Palestinian mothers who received authorization to leave Gaza for humanitarian reasons had to return to Gaza to reapply after their permits expired. In fact, it was not always necessary for mothers to return to Gaza.”
That note also states that Loveluck and the other reporters “neglected to seek comment from Israeli officials for this article.”
Read the full article here






