Trump’s Call to Action Signals a High-Stakes Battle Over the Future of Taxpayer-Funded Broadcasting
After hearings in Congress last week over the continued funding of NPR and PBS, calls for their defunding are continuing to grow amongst Republican lawmakers, and this time, the President is chiming in.
President Donald Trump has intensified his campaign against public broadcasters NPR and PBS, urging congressional Republicans to “DEFUND AND TOTALLY DISASSOCIATE THEMSELVES” from what he branded as “RADICAL LEFT ‘MONSTERS’ THAT SO BADLY HURT OUR COUNTRY!” The fiery post Truth Social just hours ago comes on the heels of a contentious congressional hearing last week and signals a renewed push to dismantle federal funding for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB), which supports these outlets.
Defunding Recommend to DOGE
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In our previous coverage, we detailed the March 26, 2025, hearing led by Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA), where GOP lawmakers grilled NPR CEO Katherine Maher and PBS CEO Paula Kerger over bias in their newsrooms and reporting. The session ended with Greene vowing to recommend the CPB’s “complete and total defund and dismantling,” a stance Trump echoed last week when he expressed hope that the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), led by Elon Musk, would “end” the broadcaster’s public support. Today’s comments, however, marks a direct call for immediate action, aligning with Trump’s broader second-term agenda of slashing waste in federal programs.
Trump’s latest TRUTH follows Rep. Ronny Jackson’s (R-TX) announcement of a forthcoming bill to eliminate the CPB’s $535 million annual budget. With Trump back in the White House and a GOP-controlled House, the odds of such legislation passing have surged.
Fallout from the Hearing
The March 26 hearing laid the groundwork for this escalation. As we reported, Republicans accused NPR of delaying coverage of Hunter Biden’s laptop and PBS of promoting “LGBTQ indoctrination” through children’s programming. Democrats, meanwhile, defended the broadcasters, with Rep. Robert Garcia (D-CA) quipping, “Are we really defunding Big Bird over this?”
A Pew Research survey from March 26 showed 43% of Americans favor continued CPB funding, with 24% opposed and 33% undecided—a split that leaves room for Trump’s gambit to gain traction. Musk, a key DOGE architect, has amplified the push, reposting Trump’s call on X with the comment, “End the gravy train for biased media NOW.”
Beyond the Newsroom
Defunding NPR and PBS would have far-reaching impact. The CPB supports 336 PBS stations and hundreds of NPR affiliates, many in rural areas where they provide emergency alerts, educational content, and cultural programming. Both stations do raise support through individual and corporate support like every other news outlet, but their government funding would effectively end.
With Jackson’s bill looming and Trump’s influence and popularity at an all time high, NPR and PBS face an existential fight. Democrats are gearing up to counter, with Sen. Brian Schatz (D-HI) vowing to filibuster any defunding effort in the Senate. Yet, with Trump’s base energized and GOP lawmakers emboldened, the battle over public media’s future is up in the air.