Updated ,first published
A senior Reuters executive is expected to be named the next ABC News director following the exit of Justin Stevens on Wednesday.
Simon Robinson, an Australian currently based in London has been chosen as the top executive overseeing just under 2000 staff after more than 15 years in London, according to three sources with knowledge of the matter, not authorised so speak publicly.
Robinson is currently executive editor for Reuters, one of the largest news organisations in the world. He has never worked in television.
The ABC was approached for comment.
Marks declined to comment on the appointment, when asked during a Senate Estimates hearing on Thursday. The news was first reported by The Guardian.
Stevens’ departure came as a shock to ABC staff, resigning and departing on the same day, as revealed by this masthead on Wednesday.
Stevens, the former executive producer of flagship current affairs program 7.30 and since 2022 director of news and current affairs, leaves the ABC after overseeing a period of vast change in Australia’s largest newsroom.
With just under 2000 staff in the news division, the role is the most scrutinised in the broadcaster outside of managing director Hugh Marks’ own position, overseeing news content published across the public broadcaster’s television, radio and digital platforms.
The appointment of Stevens’ replacement will be Marks’ biggest decision to date.The total package for the role, including superannuation, was $678,000 in the last financial year.
Informing staff of his departure on Wednesday afternoon, Stevens said the decision was both professional and personal. “There is no more complex news organisation in the country, no more scrutinised institution, and few so laden with public expectations,” Stevens said.
“In that context, I have sought to strengthen and defend our journalism without being blind to our stumbles; to meet the state of constant change in the digital age; and to improve our culture in News to one where we hold ourselves to the same standards as we do of others in the broader community.”
Stevens, who is leaving the ABC entirely, has not been at work since Thursday last week, the sources said. He has been approached for comment.
Stevens, who was just 38 when he took the role, has worked under two managing directors and two chairs while in the job, with both eras defined by their vastly different leadership styles and approaches to how the broadcaster should run its news operation.
His appointment by former managing director David Anderson in April 2022 was viewed at the time as unexpected, as he had never held a senior management position and beat out several more senior candidates.
Much of his time under Anderson was led by a digital-first strategy, pushing the ABC toward its newer platforms and attracting critique for moving away from the ABC’s core audience on broadcast services like linear television and radio. Under Anderson’s strategy, more than 120 roles were made redundant, including the controversial removal of the ABC’s political editor Andrew Probyn.
But since Marks’ arrival in early 2025, he has emphasised the ongoing importance of broadcast, with the nightly news bulletin regularly attracting an average audience of 1 million viewers. However, this period coincided with about 50 more job cuts.
The director of news and current affairs at the ABC is one of the most contentious jobs in Australian media due to the political implications of being publicly funded. Editorial and programming decisions such as the axing of Q+A in 2025 always attract controversy.
Stevens is the latest in a long line of ABC executives to have left since Anderson’s resignation, including former content chief Chris Oliver-Taylor and head of communications Nick Leys.
Stevens has created Indigenous and climate reporting teams during his tenure, overhauled the ABC’s news app and brought all news output under one banner.
He has also overseen the highly charged coverage of the Israeli war in Gaza, which began after the October 7 attacks in 2023, receiving sharp criticism from News Corp outlets over perceived bias.
But one of the biggest controversies of his tenure was the exit of veteran journalist Stan Grant, who left in 2023 following an appearance during the ABC coverage of King Charles’ coronation, in which Grant made reflections on Australia’s colonial past.
Grant later said he felt betrayed by the ABC, after he had been invited onto the broadcaster’s coverage but then did not have its public backing over the comments he made.
The ABC also had to navigate the fallout of the sacking of Antoinette Lattouf that same year, though this was not a decision taken by Stevens or the news division. Since Lattouf won her subsequent Federal Court case against the broadcaster, it has implemented new public comment guidelines for its staff.
The ABC’s digital audience rose by 7 per cent in the 2025 financial year, according to its annual report. The average audience of its nightly news bulletins also increased, as did that of its flagship current affairs program 7.30.
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Disclaimer : This story is auto aggregated by a computer programme and has not been created or edited by DOWNTHENEWS. Publisher: www.smh.com.au







