POLITICS
President-Elect Trump's Swords at Public Media: NPR and PBS Brace for Impact
USASat Dec 28 2024
Public media like NPR and PBS are facing some serious heat. Donald Trump, soon to be president, has been openly criticizing US media, including calls to strip CBS of its broadcast license and refusing interviews with 60 Minutes. But it’s the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB), which funds organizations like PBS and NPR, that's really irked him. In April, Trump lashed out on Truth Social, calling for an end to NPR’s funding, labeling them a "liberal disinformation machine. "
With Trump’s inauguration around the corner, these public media outlets are gearing up for potential cuts. After his re-election, a report warned NPR stations not to assume past funding trends would continue. PBS board members also got a heads-up from political consultants. Trump and his allies have been pushing for years to cut all federal funding to CPB, citing concerns about left-leaning bias.
In response, PBS President Paula Kerger highlighted the bipartisan support and vital role of public television in communities across the country. However, conservative groups like Project 2025 have been echoing calls to defund public media, arguing that the government shouldn’t force the conservative half of the country to pay for what they see as leftist propaganda.
Even influencers like Elon Musk have jumped on the bandwagon. After NPR left Twitter in April, Musk tweeted “Defund @NPR. ” More recently, Musk co-authored an op-ed in the Wall Street Journal, identifying the $535 million annual allocation to CPB as a target for cuts.
While these attacks are intensifying, they’re not new. Every Republican administration since the CPB's founding in 1967 has attempted to defund public media. The US spends far less on public media than peer nations like Germany, Norway, and the UK. In 2005, then-Representative Ed Markey defended public media, arguing that its benefits are an incredible bargain that should not be lost.
Currently, bills like the No Propaganda Act and the Defund NPR Act are already in Congress. However, the CPB being funded two years in advance and local stations running crucial emergency alerts might slow these efforts. The most vulnerable stations, often in rural Trump-supporting areas, would feel the brunt of these cuts the most. As Eric Nuzum, a former NPR executive, noted, “very rural parts of the United States” will suffer the most.
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questions
What are the long-term economic and social impacts of defunding public media institutions?
Who will fund the next season of Downton Abbey if PBS is defunded?
Is defunding public media a secret plot to control all media outlets through commercial entities?
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