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On June 26, 2025, Anna Wintour officially stepped down as Editor in Chief of American Vogue after an iconic 37-year tenure. She began her reign in 1988 with a bold move: placing Michaela Bercu on the cover wearing a Christian Lacroix couture top paired with jeans. That cover set the tone for Wintour’s Vogue, a publication where high fashion met culture, streetwear, and social relevance.
Over the decades, she helped launch the careers of now-household-name designers, turned Vogue into a cultural compass, and created moments that defined generations. She shaped the image of the modern fashion editor, and turned the Met Gala into a global spectacle.
While she’s stepped back from daily editorial duties at Vogue US, Wintour remains deeply embedded in the brand’s DNA. She now holds two powerful titles: Global Chief Content Officer of Condé Nast and Global Editorial Director of Vogue.
As Chief Content Officer, she now oversees the editorial strategy for brands including Vanity Fair, GQ, Architectural Digest, Teen Vogue, Wired, and Bon Appétit. As Vogue’s Global Editorial Director, she continues to guide all international editions of the magazine and its digital and event expansions.
A new position Head of Editorial Content, American Vogue — will now lead the U.S. edition, reporting directly to Wintour. This transition opens the door for a new generation of editorial leadership while keeping her steady hand in place.
What Still Belongs to Anna
Wintour may be stepping aside from the EIC role, but she is far from finished. She will continue to oversee several iconic editorial territories:
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The Met Gala, which she co-chairs and curates
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Vogue World, the brand’s growing digital and live event platform
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Tennis and theatre coverage, two of her personal passions within the brand
Just days after the announcement, she made her first public appearance at Marc Jacobs’ Fall 2025 show in New York, reminding everyone that she remains very much in the spotlight.
This move is not a retirement , it’s a corporate restructure aligned with Condé Nast’s global editorial strategy. In recent years, the company has centralized content decisions to reduce redundancy and create stronger brand synergy across platforms. Elevating Wintour to oversee global content allows for a more cohesive storytelling approach across all titles.
It also signals that while Vogue is evolving digitally, its core legacy and identity remain intact under her broader vision.
Who Will Take the Throne?
Speculation about who will lead American Vogue next has filled industry circles. According to reporting from People and The Times UK, several contenders are emerging:
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Chloe Malle, current editor of Vogue.com and host of The Run-Through podcast, is seen as a digitally forward thinker.
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Chioma Nnadi, Head of Editorial Content at British Vogue, is a respected Wintour mentee and rising international voice.
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Amy Astley, Editor in Chief of Architectural Digest, has longstanding Vogue roots and previously launched Teen Vogue.
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Edward Enninful, former British Vogue Editor in Chief, has global fashion gravitas.
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Eva Chen, Instagram’s fashion partnerships director, would bring a tech-meets-culture POV.
This marks a generational shift. Vogue US, under new leadership, is expected to lean further into digital platforms like TikTok, Instagram Reels, and on-the-go fashion reporting while still preserving its signature high-gloss covers and print integrity.
Print will remain, but its role may shift toward prestige storytelling and curated moments. Daily engagement will likely center on short-form video, influencer features, and globally minded trend coverage.
With Wintour still overseeing global editorial, the new US lead will have room to experiment while operating within an established framework of excellence.
Anna Wintour’s move isn’t a farewell , it’s a masterclass in strategic leadership. She is choosing to evolve with the culture, not fight against it. She is no longer the singular voice behind the magazine. She is now the architect of Condé Nast’s editorial future.
This model mirrors what many legacy brands are exploring , a blend of iconic heritage and digital-first direction, where institutional memory is preserved but fresh energy is welcomed.
Wintour’s Met Gala, Vogue World, and themed coverage will remain cultural beacons. But the tone of Vogue may shift, slightly, as a new voice rises in the American market.
Anna Wintour is no longer the daily force behind Vogue US, but she remains one of the most influential figures in fashion publishing. Her exit is not the end of an era, it’s the beginning of a new one, led by the structures she helped build and the voices she continues to shape.











