President Donald Trump has officially urged Congress to begin the process of pulling federal taxpayer funding from left-wing media outlets NPR and PBS.
The New York Post reported Monday that Trump’s White House budget director Russ Vought drafted a memo asking GOP lawmakers to cut the funding.
The memo requests Congress to slash $1.1 billion allotted to the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB), as well as $8.3 billion that was allotted to USAID.
In the memo, Vought wrote:
“Since day one, the Trump Administration has targeted waste, fraud, and abuse in Federal spending through executive action, DOGE review, and other efforts by departments and agencies.
“Congress has expressed strong interest in supporting those efforts, and requested the Administration transmit rescissions to the Hill for swift approval.”
The memo continued, “OMB recommends the Administration respond with two proposals to cut $9.3 billion.
“The first includes a rescission of $8.3 billion in wasteful foreign aid spending (out of $22 billion) that does not expire in Fiscal Year (FY) 2025.
“The second is a separate rescission of all Federal funding for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB) — which funds the politically biased public radio and public television system.”
Trump has said he would love to see NPR and PBS funding quashed.
“They spend more money than any other network of its type ever conceived, so the kind of money that’s being wasted, and it’s a very biased view, you know that better than anybody,” Trump said last month.
“And I’d be honored to see it end.”
Last month, NPR CEO Katherine Maher and PBS CEO Paula Kerger testified before the DOGE subcommittee.
They were grilled about alleged biased content as Republicans called for their federal funding to be revoked.
According to NPR, 38% of revenue comes from corporate sponsorships, 31% comes from “core and other programming fees,” 13% comes from “contributions of cash and financial assets,” 7% comes from “other revenues,” 5% comes from “PRSS contract, satellite interconnection and distribution,” another 5% comes from endowments and NPR foundation board-designed support and 1% comes from net return on investments.
NPR’s own site goes on to admit that “station programming fees comprise a significant portion of NPR’s largest source of revenue.
“The loss of federal funding would undermine the stations’ ability to pay NPR for programming, thereby weakening the institution.”
NPR’s finance page also insists the elimination of federal funding would result in less journalism.
So, while NPR publicly downplays its government funding, smaller stations that are funded by the government give cash to NPR.
All of this occurs as NPR claims “federal funding is essential.”
However, NPR is also pushing back on the notion that it is funded by the government.
PBS’s website states it receives funding in part from the CPB.
The CPB receives roughly $500 million a year, approved by Congress.
“CPB allocates the appropriation mostly to public television and radio stations, with some assigned to NPR and PBS to support national programming,” PBS says.
“The News Hour receives about 35% of its annual funding/budget from CPB and PBS via national programming funds – a combination of CPB appropriation funds and annual programming dues paid to PBS by stations re-allocated to programs like ours.
“The remaining 65% is generated from individual donations, foundation grants, and corporate sponsorships,” PBS states.
PBS also receives money through the PBS Foundation, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization and a 509(a)(3) supporting organization that seeks “philanthropic gifts and grants” to fund the outlet.
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