NPR’s CEO on the Fight Over Public Media

美国国家公共广播电台(NPR)总裁论公共媒体之争

The Journal.

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2025-05-30

24 分钟
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In May, President Trump signed an executive order cutting off federal funding for public broadcasters, including NPR and PBS. In his order, Trump said “neither entity presents a fair, accurate or unbiased portrayal of current events to taxpaying citizens.” WSJ’s Joe Flint breaks down the decades-long fight over public media, and NPR’s CEO Katherine Maher explains why her network is challenging the Trump administration in court. Jessica Mendoza hosts.  Further Listening: -For Millions of Student-Loan Borrowers, It's Time to Pay  -Can the GOP Unite Around Trump's 'Big, Beautiful Bill'?  Sign up for WSJ’s free What’s News newsletter . Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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  • Earlier this month, President Donald Trump took an axe to the public broadcasting budget.

  • President Trump signed an executive order on May 1st,

  • which ended federal funding for NPR and the Public Broadcasting Service,

  • or PBS, over what he claims is bias in their programming.

  • PBS and NPR are America's leading public television and radio networks, respectively.

  • Both were established more than 50 years ago and given government funding by Congress in the process.

  • This week, NPR pushed back against Trump's executive order,

  • saying the order is an attack on free speech.

  • How would you characterize the fight between National Public Radio and the president at the moment?

  • It's a fight that's going on on multiple levels.

  • That's our colleague Joe Flint.

  • He covers media and entertainment.

  • So one aspect of the fight.

  • is the idea or question of whether the government should continue to help fund public media.

  • So there's been many attempts over the last several decades to end public funding,

  • and Trump has just put it on the forefront.

  • He has pretty much said, I feel that they are biased,

  • hence we shouldn't support them with taxpayer money.

  • But for NPR CEO Catherine Marr, This fight is about more than funding.

  • This is about the First Amendment.