Although the cuts will have an effect, critics disagree on whether the two-year funding is necessary for the stations, which have been accused by conservatives of liberal bias.
Judy Muller, a journalism professor emerita at the University of Southern California who reported for PBS and NPR, told The Epoch Times that the smaller NPR affiliates will be affected most by the cuts as their listeners rely on the outlet for national news and natural-disaster updates.
She called the accusations of liberal bias at NPR and PBS “a fallacy” and “absurd.”
“I can’t think of two more even-handed, fair news organizations,” she said.
“The Corporation for Public Broadcasting can survive without government funding, as can NPR [National]. It’s their smaller stations that will take a hard, possibly fatal, hit.”
Joel Kaplan, director of the Goldring Arts, Style & Culture Journalism Program at Syracuse University, told The Epoch Times that although those numbers are just a small fraction of the revenue of those stations, that funding makes a huge difference.
“What [critics] won’t realize is that the vast majority of those funds go to member stations throughout the country, and they use those funds to pay for getting the NPR and PBS feeds. Without those funds, NPR and PBS won’t be able to collect from their member stations, which will force considerable cutbacks,” he said.
“There’s much talk about news deserts in the country because of the lack of news organizations. Public broadcasting made up for that in many rural areas.”
In a statement, NPR President and CEO Katherine Maher called the defunding “an unwarranted dismantling of beloved local civic institutions, and an act of Congress that disregards the public will.”
“Public funding has enabled the flourishing of a uniquely American system of unparalleled cultural, informational, and educational programming, and ensured access to vital emergency alerting and reporting in times of crisis—all for about $1.60 per American, every year,” she said. “Parents and children, senior citizens and students, tribal and rural communities—all will bear the harm of this vote.”
Tim Graham of the Media Research Center, which documents liberal media bias, told The Epoch Times that the funding cut does not mean the end for PBS or NPR and that they will instead need to make business decisions.
“Any business or nonprofit operation is going to struggle with that kind of revenue cut,” he said. “It’s by no means a fatal blow, not even to the small local stations that the public-media lobbyists drag out. They'll have to be leaner, and they might be even meaner to Republicans.”
Graham said he doesn’t expect the alleged bias to change.
“Some conservatives have been nervous that if they have to go to leftist billionaires like George and Alex Soros, the bias would be worse,” he said. “It’s still better than making conservatives pay for their own destructive bias.”
Kaplan said that a problem with the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB) is that it got rid of its ombudsman.
“When I was CPB ombudsman, my charge was to examine objectivity and balance in public broadcasting, so I was able to examine specific examples of liberal bias,” he said.







