WASHINGTON—ABC’s recent suspension of late-night talk show host Jimmy Kimmel over his comments on the assassination of Charlie Kirk sparked a national debate.
Kimmel’s supporters have alleged that Carr’s statements led to the suspension and accused him of being a censor on behalf of the Trump administration, while others have cheered him on.
Catholic and Conservative
After his birth in Washington in 1979, Carr remained there for his education, receiving a bachelor of arts in government from Georgetown University and a juris doctor from Catholic University—two of the largest universities in the District of Columbia, and both Catholic.After law school in 2008, he clerked for Judge Dennis Shedd of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, an appointee of President George W. Bush who once worked for the well-known conservative Sen. Strom Thurmond (R-S.C.).
Carr on 5G, Space, and Project 2025
Carr’s views on communications law and policy are varied. He was the author of the Federal Communications Commission chapter in The Heritage Foundation’s Project 2025, a pre-election policy document prepared in anticipation of Trump’s victory.In that chapter, Carr called for the agency to take action against big technology companies, such as stripping them of non-textual immunity from lawsuits under Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, a law that has long prevented companies from being sued for the content they host but do not create. He also wrote that they should be required to pay more money to subsidize rural connectivity programs, as well as establish appeals processes for content moderation decisions.
During the 2020 presidential election, conservatives criticized decisions by social media companies such as Twitter and Facebook to restrict access to posts expressing views critical of the COVID-19 vaccine mandates, Hunter Biden’s laptop, and the results of the election.
Carr’s Views on the CCP
In Project 2025’s “Mandate for Leadership,” Carr wrote extensively about using the agency to combat the Chinese Communist Party (CCP).“There are ... strong actions that the FCC can and should take to address the CCP’s malign campaign[s],” Carr said.
Carr’s ideas included banning the Chinese mobile application TikTok on “national security grounds”—a measure required by an act of Congress, but which has been paused by Trump amid efforts to broker a sale of the company to an American owner—as well as expanding the FCC’s Covered List to include more CCP-linked companies, which would ban them from providing any communications equipment in the United States.
Kimmel’s Suspension
In the wake of Kirk’s assassination on Sept. 10, Carr criticized the American Broadcasting Company (ABC) for what he said were false and “truly sick” comments made by Kimmel on his “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” show.ABC suspended the show indefinitely on Sept. 17 but announced on Sept. 22 that it would be reinstated.
“We have spent the last days having thoughtful conversations with Jimmy, and after those conversations, we reached the decision to return the show on Tuesday.”
Kimmel’s statements also led Nexstar Media, a network that owns the news organization NewsNation among other assets, to block the show from being aired.
Opponents attribute Kimmel’s prior suspension to Carr’s comments in response, when the FCC chairman suggested that the agency would take action against networks that air Kimmel’s show.
Carr accused Kimmel of misleading people with his comments and said that broadcasters’ licenses, issued by the FCC, require them to operate in the public interest, which he believes was not served by that broadcast.
“The broadcasters ... are entirely different than people that use other forms of communication. They have a license granted by us, the FCC, that comes with an obligation to operate in the public interest,” Carr told Johnson. “These companies can find ways to change conduct and take action ... or there is going to be additional work for the FCC ahead.
Those comments were criticized by some as imperiling free speech and the First Amendment.
Former Rep. Elizabeth “Liz” Cheney (R-Wyo.), an outspoken Trump critic, also weighed in.
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said Kimmel was not suspended because of Trump administration pressure but because of an ABC decision.
Asked about criticisms against Carr, Trump told reporters in the Oval Office the day before that the FCC head is “a courageous person.”
“I think Brendan Carr doesn’t like to see the airwaves be used illegally and incorrectly and purposely horribly. [He] doesn’t like to see a person that won the election in a landslide get 97 percent bad publicity before the election,” Trump added, referring to himself.







