BREAKING NEWS: President Trump formally asks Congress to take back the $1.1 billion it has set aside for all public broadcasters for the next two years.

Trump asks Congress to wipe out funding for public broadcasting
Updated June 3, 20255:53 PM ET  - npr
By David Folkenflik,  Deirdre Walsh
People participate in a rally to call on Congress to protect funding for public broadcasters PBS and NPR outside the NPR headquarters in Washington, DC, on March 26, 2025.
Saul Loeb/AFP/Getty Image
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President Trump took yet another step Tuesday to place NPR and PBS at the center of his broader clash with major cultural institutions, formally asking Congress to take back the $1.1 billion it has set aside for all public broadcasters for the next two years.
A simple majority of lawmakers in each chamber must approve what's technically known as a "rescission request" within 45 days for it to become law. With their slim leads in both the House and Senate, Republicans can afford just a few defections.

A House subcommittee hearing earlier this spring set the stage for Trump's request. His Republican allies accused NPR and PBS of partisan bias. Lawmakers used the hearing as a springboard to argue for elimination of the federal funding that is funneled through the Corporation for Public Broadcasting to local stations and the public media networks.

PBS President and CEO Paula Kerger testified at that hearing. On Tuesday, she warned that Trump's proposal would devastate public broadcasting stations, particularly in rural communities.
"Without PBS member stations, Americans will lose unique local programming and emergency services in times of crisis," she said in a statement. "There's nothing more American than PBS and we are proud to highlight real issues, individuals, and places that would otherwise be overlooked by commercial media."

Katherine Maher, the CEO and president of NPR, echoed those sentiments and said that local public radio stations could face "immediate budget shortfalls," leading to layoffs and show cancellations. She also questioned the legality of the request.

"The proposal, which is explicitly viewpoint-based and aimed at controlling and punishing content, violates the Public Broadcasting Act, the First Amendment, and the Due Process Clause," Maher said in a statement.

Taking a cue from DOGE on foreign aid
The cuts to public broadcasting are part of a larger package from the White House of $9.4 billion in proposed clawbacks, which include funding for foreign aid. House Speaker Mike Johnson noted that many of the cuts were identified by the task force on government efficiency led by billionaire Elon Musk.
"We thank Elon Musk and his DOGE team for identifying a wide range of wasteful, duplicative, and outdated programs, and House Republicans are eager to eliminate them," Johnson said in a statement, vowing to act quickly on the request.

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https://www.npr.org/2025/06/03/nx-s1-5418080/pbs-npr-trump-rescission-public-broadcasting?utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=npr&utm_source=threads.net&utm_term=nprnews

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