Former “CBS Evening News” anchor Jeff Glor — who was replaced by Norah O’Donnell — was canned by the Tiffany Network as part of Tuesday’s sweeping layoffs across parent company Paramount Global.
Glor, who held the anchor chair once occupied by Walter Cronkite and Dan Rather from 2017 to 2019, had been relegated to weekend duty as co-host of “CBS Saturday Morning” and as a CBS News special correspondent after he was ousted from the plum post.
A source close to the situation speculated that Glor’s salary was “too high” and that he largely kept to himself, opting not to play “office politics” or stick his neck out much since being moved to weekend duty.
CBS and a rep for Glor did not comment. Puck posted news of Glor’s departure on X.
Glor was dethroned from “CBS Evening News” amid a fierce internal campaign waged by O’Donnell, as The Post previously reported.
O’Donnell, who co-hosted the network’s morning show with Gayle King, convinced then-CBS News president Susan Zirinsky to give her Glor’s job and move the ratings-challenged broadcast from New York to Washington D.C., sources said.
The decision proved to be a costly one for CBS.
The network not only spent tons of money moving the show, but it also did not budge the ratings of the third-place program.
During O’Donnell’s five years at the helm, the ratings have plunged roughly 25%, cementing the newscast firmly behind rivals at ABC and NBC.
CBS News top brass announced this summer that O’Donnell would vacate the anchor chair after the presidential election in November.
The network will also bring the show back to New York in a cost-savings measure and revamp it under CBS News journalist John Dickerson and WCBS anchorman Maurice DuBois.
The changes come as CBS-parent Paramount is in the throes of laying off 2,000 staffers in order to cut $500 million from the budget ahead of its planned merger with Skydance Media, which is expected to be finalized next year.
On Tuesday, Paramount enacted the second phase of the layoffs, which kicked off in August.
The company said 90% of the layoffs would be completed and that the final 10% would come at a later date.
Sources told The Post that the cuts would likely be completed by the end of 2024, noting that CBS News’ Washington. D.C. bureau would likely get hit after the election.