Article 75WDQ NPR Flubs Its Recovery From Brutal Republican Funding Attacks

NPR Flubs Its Recovery From Brutal Republican Funding Attacks

by
Karl Bode
from Techdirt on (#75WDQ)
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NPR is imposing a new round of buyouts and layoffs as it tries to survive the brutal Trump GOP attacks on public broadcasting. According to NPR, it's being forced to trim $8 million of its $300-million annual budget because of the illegal (for whatever that word is worth any more) Trump administration attacks on NPR, PBS and their member station funding earlier this year.

The originalexecutive orderresulted in Congressobliteratingthe entire Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB) budget of $1.1 billion for fiscal years 2026 and 2027. With no money left to function, the CPBvoted to dissolve itself last January. A judge subsequently ruled that the defunding was illegal and violated the First Amendment, but the ruling came too late to save the CPB.

According to NPR, it received $113 million in private donations ($80 million of it coming from Connie and Steve Ballmer) to offset the losses, but that money won't be used to save the jobs of human beings doing actual reporting. Instead, it can only be spent on technological innovation" (read: likely given to Microsoft for enterprise services):

Paradoxically, just prior to the announcement of these cost-cutting measures, NPR received apair of private gifts totaling $113 million- representing the network's second- and third-largest in its 56-year history. Most of that money, however, is dedicated to technological innovation."

While NPR doesn't really take all that much money from the public anymore (roughly 1% of NPR's annual budget comes from the government), the CPB distributed over 70 percentof its funding to about 1,500 public radio and TV stations. Much of them providing popular and useful educational programming.

Aswe've noted previously, right wingers, corporations, and authoritarians loathe public broadcasting because, in itsideal form, it can untether public interest journalism from the often perverse financial incentives inherent in our consolidated, billionaire-owned, ad-engagement-based corporate media.

A media, if you hadn't noticed, that is easily bullied, cowed, and manipulated by bad actors looking to normalize, downplay, or validate no limit ofterrible and illegal bullshit(see: CBS,Washington Post, theNew York Times, and countless others). In functional countries, taxpayer-funded journalism functions as a public interest firewall from corporatism and authoritarianism.

In the United States, decades of attacks and defunding have left us with outlets like NPR that barely even qualify as a public broadcaster." And as NPR became a more traditional, corporate ad-driven outlet you could watch in real time how it became friendlier and friendlier to right wing narratives for fear of being accused of a liberal bias" (for all the good it wound up doing them).

But after decades of under-funding and attacks, what passes for U.S. public media is a distant shadow of the idea's full potential. And now even that's been left reeling. Should we survive authoritarianism, maybe there will be a few useful lessons buried in the rubble.

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