This morning, Republicans in the senate passed a resolution to cut $1 Billion dollars in funding that went to public broadcasting and another $8 billion dollars for foreign assistance programs. The cuts to foreign assistance originally included the deletion of PEPFAR, a Bush era program to provide global assistance to fighting the AIDS epidemic.
Republicans backing the measure to cut public broadcasting claim that these public broadcasting networks promote an “anti-right bias.” In short, Republicans disagreed with the content of the stories reported on by NPR/PBS and decided to punish these organizations by withdrawing valuable funds used to pay for localized journalism throughout all areas of the country. This is a shame because, while wealthy states with many donors can afford to keep their local NPR stations funded despite the shortfall in federal money, the poorest states in the country will be unable to pay the difference and will lose access to programming. Local news infrastructure (personalized to the state and even county level) will be lost, worsening an already dire crisis of “news deserts” expanding across the country. “News deserts” are regions of the USA that do not have local journalists covering state and county level politics or current events, leaving residents uninformed of news immediately relevant to their lives. National news, impersonal and often frustratingly beyond an individual’s capacity to influence, is not an adequate replacement for the loss of local news reporting. Republicans have decided, in short, to eliminate valuable journalism jobs in the most vulnerable regions of the country to save a handful of pennies.

NPR delivers the facts, even when they aren’t pretty. Republicans can argue that the reporting leans into issues of interest to lefties, sure. Lately, NPR has been covering the war in Gaza a ton (with emphasis on the massive civilian death-toll), and Republicans would probably rather some reporting that painted Israel in a more positive light. Fortunately for us civilians, politicians cannot dictate the news. NPR has a duty to report the capital t Truth: true information! If Republicans do not like what they hear on the radio, perhaps instead of trying to silence it, they should act to improve the world and change the headlines for the better. That is, in fact, the purpose of journalism– to hold lawmakers accountable to the material reality of the country, to shine light on corruption, and to depict the events of the world as they are. If republicans are upset by the goings on reported in the news; the endless Trump power grabs, the atrocious wars propagating everywhere, the lurking suggestion of pedophiles and Nazis underpinning our institutions of government…. well my Republican friends… act! We can’t afford to bury our heads in the sand. Pretending everything is dandy in the world won’t solve a damned thing.
This all goes without saying that NPR’s broadcasting is generally very good, positive, community-oriented, and educational. The quality of the productions both at the local and national level are really high. I happen to like NPR a lot. I listen to WBUR Boston (90.9) and NHPR of Southern New Hampshire (88.3).
I wonder, what would an NPR without an “anti-right bias” look like? What stories is NPR neglecting that Republicans want to hear? Is Fox News the model for conservative broadcasting…? The same Fox News that removed its stock ticker when the market slipped this year?