Trump says he's ending federal funding for NPR and PBS. They say he can't - Article by NPR

President Trump issued an executive order late Thursday directing the Corporation for Public Broadcasting's board of directors to "cease federal funding for NPR and PBS," the nation's primary public broadcasters, claiming ideological bias.

"Neither entity presents a fair, accurate or unbiased portrayal of current events to tax-paying citizens," the order says. "The CPB Board shall cancel existing direct funding to the maximum extent allowed by law and shall decline to provide future funding."

It is not clear that the president has the authority to make such orders to CPB under the law.

PBS President and CEO Paula Kerger called it a "blatantly unlawful Executive Order, issued in the middle of the night."

CPB is already suing the Trump administration over his executive order seeking to fire three of its five board members; on Friday, it dismissed the validity of the president's new order.

"CPB is not a federal executive agency subject to the President's authority," the corporation wrote in a statement issued Friday morning. "Congress directly authorized and funded CPB to be a private nonprofit corporation wholly independent of the federal government."

The CPB noted that the statute Congress passed to create it "expressly forbade 'any department, agency, officer, or employee of the United States to exercise any direction, supervision, or control over educational television or radio broadcasting, or over [CPB] or any of its grantees or contractors."

Congress said that such funds "may be used at the discretion of the recipient" for producing or acquiring programs to put on the air.

Trump's newest order appears to envision a continuation of federal subsidies for public radio and television stations — apart from NPR and PBS. It is unclear how that squares with Trump's pledge to ask Congress to rescind all funds already approved for public broadcasting.

Congress allocates federal funding for CPB and specifies how it shall be spent. The funding is carried out in two-year cycles, ahead of time, a structure designed to help shield public media from political pressure.

Trump, by contrast, has waged rhetorical warfare against it, fueling and channeling his supporters' distrust of traditional newsgathering.

On social media platforms, Trump recently blasted the two national public broadcasting networks, posting in all caps: "REPUBLICANS MUST DEFUND AND TOTALLY DISASSOCIATE THEMSELVES FROM NPR & PBS, THE RADICAL LEFT 'MONSTERS' THAT SO BADLY HURT OUR COUNTRY!"

NPR vowed to fight back in a statement released Friday by Heather Walls, its senior vice president of communications.

"We will vigorously defend our right to provide essential news, information and life-saving services to the American public," NPR said in the statement. "The President's order is an affront to the First Amendment rights of NPR and locally owned and operated stations throughout America to produce and air programming that meets the needs of their communities."

It said the executive order jeopardizes the national airing of NPR newscasts, and programs like Morning Edition and Tiny Desk Radio.




Accusations of political bias​

The leaders of NPR and PBS testified at a House oversight committee hearing in March on allegations of ideological bias in public broadcasting.

Republican lawmakers assailed NPR President and CEO Katherine Maher for political messages she had posted to social media years before she joined NPR in March 2024, as well as news decisions the network made largely before her tenure.

PBS' Kerger found herself queried about a video involving a performer in drag singing a variation on a children's song for a young audience. (Kerger testified that the video was posted on the website of PBS' New York City member station and never aired on television.)

Earlier this week, the Federal Election Commission unanimously dismissed a complaint of bias and illegal electioneering against NPR, finding that the network is engaged in a "legitimate press function."




How federal funds reach NPR and PBS​

Federal funding for public media flows through the congressionally chartered Corporation for Public Broadcasting. Congress allocated $535 million for the CPB for the current fiscal year — an amount affirmed in a recent stop-gap bill passed by the Republican-controlled U.S. House and Senate.

According to the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, Congress has fully funded it through Sept 30, 2027.

At the hearing in late March, heads of both networks spoke of the mission to provide nonpartisan news and programming to the American public, without charge. They said stations would be most vulnerable if federal funding was cut off for public broadcasting.

NPR typically receives about 1% of its funding directly from the federal government, and a slightly greater amount indirectly; its 246 member institutions, operating more than 1,000 stations, receive on average 8% to 10% of their funds from CPB.

By contrast, PBS and its stations receive about 15% of their revenues from CPB's federal funds.

Most of the funds for public media go to local stations; and most to subsidize television, which is more expensive than radio.





A government investigation of public broadcasters​

The Trump administration's assault on public media began just weeks after his inauguration. Trump's appointee as the nation's chief broadcast regulator, Federal Communications Commission Chairperson Brendan Carr, launched an investigation of NPR and PBS, contending it appears that their corporate underwriting spots violate laws banning commercial advertisements. Carr has used it to question federal funding of the networks and their non-commercial status.

The networks say they have been encouraged repeatedly by the agency and Congress to develop private financial support and have worked assiduously for years with the FCC to ensure that content falls within FCC guidelines.

PBS offers a heavy amount of educational fare; NPR relies more on news and music. Both provide locally grounded content and reach more than 99% of the population, at no cost. In many states and communities, the stations also serve as a key component of emergency and disaster response systems.

While the CPB is suing the Trump administration over the attempted firings of three of the five board members, were Trump to succeed in doing so, it would appear he would have, for now, erased the quorum necessary for the CPB board to take any actions. That includes, presumably, the elimination of funds for PBS and NPR.

Disclosure: This story was reported and written by NPR Media Correspondent David Folkenflik and edited by Deputy Business Editor Emily Kopp, Managing Editor Gerry Holmes and Managing Editor Vickie Walton-James. Under NPR's protocol for reporting on itself, no corporate official or news executive reviewed this story before it was posted publicly.

article: https://www.npr.org/2025/05/02/nx-s1-5384790/trump-orders-end-to-federal-funding-for-npr-and-pbs
 
PBS's current original programming:

Washington Week (1967) - Weekly woke news program nobody watches anymore.
Masterpiece (1971) - Recycled British TV
Great Performances (1972) - random art performances
Nova (1974) - Science documentaries
PBS NewsHour (1975) - Insufferable low-quality newscast
Austin City Limits (1976) - Generic music show
The Woodwright's Shop (1979) - What it says
This Old House (1979) - Home remodeling
MotorWeek (1981) - Pointless show on cars
Nature (1982) - animal documentaries
Frontline (1983) - Woke news documentaries
American Masters (1986) - A biography show
American Experience (1988 - Woke documentaries
P.O.V. (1988 - More woke documentaries
Ciao Italia (1989) - cooking
Antiques Roadshow (1997) - Pawn Stars for people too good for Pawn Stars
Independent Lens (1999) - More work documentaries
Secrets of the Dead (2000) - The bloodhound gang uses the science to solve history
Ask This Old House (2002) - Call-in show on TV
BBC World News America (2019) - What it says
Finding Your Roots (2012) - Geneology for dummies
Reel South (2016) - Documentaries about people in the American south
Destination Craft with Jim West (2017) - Crafting
Amanpour & Company (2018 - Extra payday for CNN loudmouth
Beyond 100 Days (2018[3] - BBC News stuff
We'll Meet Again (2018 - Weird personal reunion show
Prehistoric Road Trip (2020) - Show for the dinosaur obsessed
Tell Me More with Kelly Corrigan (2020 ) - Interview show
The Trouble with Maggie Cole (2020) - British TV show
When Disaster Strikes (2021) - Disaster porn from the third world
 
The CPB noted that the statute Congress passed to create it "expressly forbade 'any department, agency, officer, or employee of the United States to exercise any direction, supervision, or control over educational television or radio broadcasting, or over [CPB] or any of its grantees or contractors."
So basically they answer to literally nobody, have zero accountability, and legally must be funded with tax dollars forever?

LOL

NPR Media Correspondent David Folkenflik
That's gotta be an AI generated fake hippie reporter name, right?
 
Don't know anyone who watches PBS anymore. Doubt it's even educational like it once was, and only pushes wokeness. Glad to see NPR lose funding .
My kids like PBS kids.

Lyla in the loop is decent enough even if the twin sisters are annoyingly black (i.e. hoop and holler shit). The rest of the family is fine and teaches logic skills

Work it out wombats is meh and don't like the lesbian kangaroo with adopted daughter.

So no worries if it's defunded. They are starting to like playing videogames with me more now anyways.
 
NPR is a completely mask-off propaganda mill at this point. for the last fifteen years they've been happily and uncritically carrying every single scummy DNC-approved spin job as if it was unbiased truth. I knew NPR was cooked top to bottom when I heard them run a whole program on that stupid story Elizabeth Warren made up about Bernie telling her that women can't run for president. their only purpose at this point is to launder The Party's talking points and give them a veneer of legitimacy by acting like high-minded, educated, apolitical Truth Seekers. they're FOX for coastal libs.

ever since the Republicans started talking about defunding it, they've made a point to say how little of their budget comes from actual federal money every time they have one of their stupid funding drives. so let them do without it. TJD.
 
That's gotta be an AI generated fake hippie reporter name, right?

No. He is the Jewish child of two California professors who went to cornell for a history degree. He has a reputation of being a really scummy, backstabbing kind of guy within journalism.

During the last presidential campaign, he accused Trump of encouraging "targeting and pogroms" against Jews.
 
Austin City Limits (1976) - Generic music show
It's more than generic now. The Austin creeped in hard. It's fully soi now. It used to be just American country acts then they started importing more pop rock international acts years ago. When I saw rap duo Run The Jewels (Rick n Morty official soundtrack) on it I knew it was a shadow of It's formal self. Surprised it's still going honestly?
 
Oh wait I forgot is the lie about these two communist front groups not that they do not receive that much federal funding? So why not just give it up?

Oh right they have spent years lying about how much government money they take in by shaking down local affiliates.
This. They've pulled the "We get less than 5% of our funding from the Government, the rest comes from private donors and viewers, so the government can't tell us to stop being biased" card for over 2 decades now.

And yet every time someone talks about removing the funding, they freak out and start bringing lawyers out of the woodwork.

PBS still has some science shows and historical documentaries that are good, but almost all of their kids programming is Pozzed to hell with minorities and gays shoved into every show. I'm sure they're working on getting troons in there too for maximum grooming potential.

NPR has nothing worthwhile left. Their "News" is just smug, fart-huffing hosts nonstop complaining about Trump and Republicans.

They've replaced stuff like Car Talk for absolute trash like Code Switch, "A news program hosted exclusively by journalists of color, tackling topic of racial justice"

And most of their old programs have shifted from their original topics of historical events and cutting edge science to... people crying about illegal immigrants, minorities, and troons.

It's un-salvagable. Cut all funding. They can either fund their little circlejerk themselves or let it die.
 
NPR has nothing worthwhile left. Their "News" is just smug, fart-huffing hosts nonstop complaining about Trump and Republicans.
My favorite moment was when a self-proclaimed Marxist claimed blacks are disproportionately affected by capitalism. These fucks can't stop being retarded, but they wouldn't be on the air as a "Marxist" if they weren't like that.

It's poverty, stupid. Blacks don't have a monopoly on poverty.
 
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Got what I voted for.
 
My favorite moment was when a self-proclaimed Marxist claimed blacks are disproportionately affected by capitalism. These fucks can't stop being retarded, but they wouldn't be on the air as a "Marxist" if they weren't like that.

It's poverty, stupid. Blacks don't have a monopoly on poverty.

I listed to one of NPR's radio programs last night. They were discussing growth in Austin TX. The not-white community guests on the program got off script & started complaining about gentrification and the (democratic) city government. The host wasn't having any of it. Because to be critical of that is to be probably be critical of her gentrification friends and the democrats who run the city.

So she diverted the conversation to saying that the "real problem" was "capitalism" rather than genrification, rich people in the city or the city government.
 
PBS's current original programming:

Washington Week (1967) - Weekly woke news program nobody watches anymore.
Masterpiece (1971) - Recycled British TV
Great Performances (1972) - random art performances
Nova (1974) - Science documentaries
PBS NewsHour (1975) - Insufferable low-quality newscast
Austin City Limits (1976) - Generic music show
The Woodwright's Shop (1979) - What it says
This Old House (1979) - Home remodeling
MotorWeek (1981) - Pointless show on cars
Nature (1982) - animal documentaries
Frontline (1983) - Woke news documentaries
American Masters (1986) - A biography show
American Experience (1988 - Woke documentaries
P.O.V. (1988 - More woke documentaries
Ciao Italia (1989) - cooking
Antiques Roadshow (1997) - Pawn Stars for people too good for Pawn Stars
Independent Lens (1999) - More work documentaries
Secrets of the Dead (2000) - The bloodhound gang uses the science to solve history
Ask This Old House (2002) - Call-in show on TV
BBC World News America (2019) - What it says
Finding Your Roots (2012) - Geneology for dummies
Reel South (2016) - Documentaries about people in the American south
Destination Craft with Jim West (2017) - Crafting
Amanpour & Company (2018 - Extra payday for CNN loudmouth
Beyond 100 Days (2018[3] - BBC News stuff
We'll Meet Again (2018 - Weird personal reunion show
Prehistoric Road Trip (2020) - Show for the dinosaur obsessed
Tell Me More with Kelly Corrigan (2020 ) - Interview show
The Trouble with Maggie Cole (2020) - British TV show
When Disaster Strikes (2021) - Disaster porn from the third world
The only shows they still have that are worth a shit is America's Test Kitchen and its spin offs, fortunately you can just watch it all on you tube now.
 
My favorite moment was when a self-proclaimed Marxist was jacking himself off about how black people are disproportionately hurt by capitalism. These fucks can't stop being retarded, but they wouldn't be on the air as a "Marxist" if they weren't like that.

It's poverty, stupid. Blacks don't have a monopoly on poverty.
And government bureaucrats hurts them more than capitalism thanks to LBJ's "New Society" who was a POS.
PBS's current original programming:

MotorWeek (1981) - Pointless show on cars
There was a time when MotorWeek wasn't pointless but that was a long time ago.

And it'll take a while to get a painting show as good as the Joy of Painting by the late Bob Ross although I have a guilty pleasure to see various parodies.
 
I listed to one of NPR's radio programs last night. They were discussing growth in Austin TX. The not-white community guests on the program got off script & started complaining about gentrification and the (democratic) city government. The host wasn't having any of it. Because to be critical of that is to be probably be critical of her gentrification friends and the democrats who run the city.

So she diverted the conversation to saying that the "real problem" was "capitalism" rather than genrification, rich people in the city or the city government.
Gentrification is a very small part of capitalism. Very convenient of her to gloss over what the community is dealing with.
 
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