1. United States
  2. Mass.
  3. Letter

Threatening Broadcasters Over Iran Coverage Is an Abuse of FCC Power

To: Rep. Trahan, Sen. Warren, Sen. Markey

From: A verified voter in Lowell, MA

March 16

President Donald Trump and Federal Communications Commission Chair Brendan Carr are crossing a dangerous constitutional line. After unfavorable coverage of the war with Iran, Chair Carr warned that broadcasters running what he called “hoaxes and news distortions” must “correct course” before their license renewals. He suggested that stations could lose their licenses if they fail to operate in the “public interest.” President Trump then publicly said he was “thrilled” that Carr was looking at the licenses of some news organizations. Taken together, these statements amount to a clear threat of government retaliation against protected journalism. The FCC was not created to punish editorial decisions or coerce favorable war coverage. Broadcast licensing authority exists to ensure technical compliance and service to the public—not to intimidate journalists or influence news coverage. Using that authority to pressure stations because of their reporting would represent a serious abuse of regulatory power. Even within the FCC, officials have emphasized that the Commission does not have the authority or the constitutional right to go after broadcasters for their news content. The Communications Act explicitly prohibits censorship by the FCC, and the First Amendment protects journalists’ editorial decisions from government interference. This is not simply a disagreement about media bias. It is an attempt to turn a regulatory framework designed for public stewardship of the airwaves into a tool for political intimidation. If government officials can threaten license renewals whenever coverage becomes politically inconvenient, the chilling effect on journalism would be profound. The danger is especially acute during wartime. A free press is essential for informing the public about military actions, policy decisions, and the real costs of conflict. Citizens cannot make informed democratic decisions if journalists fear regulatory punishment for reporting facts the government would prefer remain unseen. Concerns about these threats have come from across the political spectrum. Members of both parties have warned against the “heavy hand of government” interfering with press freedom and private enterprise. Congress has a responsibility to ensure that independent agencies are not weaponized for political retaliation. I urge you to demand immediate oversight hearings into whether FCC licensing authority is being used to pressure broadcasters over Iran-war coverage. Congress should also reaffirm that broadcast regulation cannot be used to punish news coverage or political viewpoints and use its appropriations authority to prevent the FCC from weaponizing vague “public interest” or “news distortion” claims against independent journalism. A free press is not the enemy in wartime. Government threats against broadcasters are.

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