The Interceptâ 80%
Trump's FCC Chief Says His Censorship Protects the Little Guy. It Really Serves One Powerful Man.
By Seth Sternâ 0%
3/31/2026, 3:15:12 PM
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When Federal Communications Commission Chair Brendan Carr talks about broadcast licensees serving the âpublic interest,â he loves to emphasize âlocalism.â
Localism is the idea that powerful entities (in this case, broadcasters) should serve the needs and interests of the communities they service. In the abstract, itâs hard to argue with, especially at a time when news deserts are spreading, small-town outlets are folding, and, thanks to the administration in which Carr serves, local public radio stations are reeling.
When you look at the fights Carr actually picks with broadcasters over the âpublic interestâ requirement, however, a curious pattern emerges. They arenât local stories at all, unless you consider Tehran and San Salvador local. Theyâre national and global stories that upset not residents of underserved heartland communities, but President Donald Trump, the man whose gilded face Carr wears as a lapel pin.
Sure, when heâs playing for the home crowd, Carr will openly admit, and even brag about, helping Trump reshape the national media to his liking. Thatâs what he did at the Conservative Political Action Conference on Friday, bragging about such âwinsâ as the ParamountâSkydance merger in Trumpâs ongoing feud against media adversaries. Carrâs FCC approved that deal only after unconstitutionally extracting editorial concessions from CBS News and helping Trump launder a multimillion-dollar alleged bribe though the courts.
But in less partisan settings, from congressional testimony to mainstream media interviews, localism has become Carrâs go-to talking point whenever heâs pressed on his unconstitutional efforts to police news content or confronted with his past statements railing against the partisan suppression of news. Heâs not censoring the airwaves, he claims; heâs just sticking up for the little guy.
Yet Carr has never threatened a broadcast license because a newsroom ignored city council meetings or local crime, or offered a biased take on a school boardâs budget decisions. It would, of course, violate the First Amendment for him to do that too â the FCC, as Carr once said, âdoes not have a roving mandate to police speech in the name of the âpublic interest.ââ But at least it would be consistent with his populist gimmick.
In fact, his threats arise from coverage on national news networks, not their local affiliates, which actually hold the broadcast licenses heâs threatening to revoke. In other words, heâs threatening to punish local news stations for national content they donât produce, and sometimes donât even air, that angers Trump.
Letâs play back some of Carrâs greatest hits; see if you can spot the localism.
When Trump complained that news outlets were running âfake newsâ about Iranian missile strikes, Carr warned that broadcasters running âhoaxes and news distortionsâ would lose their licenses if they didnât correct course.
After MSNBC declined to carry a White House briefing on the deportation of Kilmar Ăbrego Garcia, Carr accused Comcast of ignoring âobvious facts of public interestâ and warned ânews distortion doesnât cut it.â MSNBC (now MSNOW) is not a local outlet â itâs a cable station that the FCC doesnât even regulate.
Carr investigated KCBS, a San Francisco radio station, leading to rampant self-censorship in fear of retaliation. That might sound local, but the story that drew his ire was about a federal immigration enforcement operation. He didnât care if the locals in the Bay Area wanted to know what immigration officers were up to â only that his boss does not want them to know.
Carr investigated CBS over the same interview with then-Vice President Kamala Harris that Trump sued over, despite expertsâ virtually unanimous agreement that the claims were frivolous. Then he helped Trump shake down Paramount for the aforementioned palm-grease by waiting until two days after Trumpâs settlement check arrived to approve CBS parent Paramountâs merger with David Ellisonâs Skydance. He touted that merger as proof of Trump âwinningâ his war on the media at CPAC.
When Trump sued the BBC over a documentary about January 6, Carr wrote to the heads of PBS and NPR demanding transcripts and video of any American broadcast of the program, claiming the British broadcast about events in Washington, D.C., contained ânews distortion.â
After late night host Jimmy Kimmel commented on the assassination of Charlie Kirk, Carr warned that if ABC and Disney did not âtake actionâ against Kimmel, the FCC would act. âWe can do this the easy way or the hard way,â he said, drawing comparisons to mafia movies.
Carr also likes to tell broadcasters what they should air, but he doesnât implore them to report more or better local news. Instead, he launched the âPledge America Campaign,â calling on broadcasters to meet their public interest obligations by airing âpatriotic, pro-America contentâ celebrating âthe historic accomplishments of this great nation from our founding through the Trump Administration today.â
And in an expressly anti-local âpublic interestâ intervention, Carr enthusiastically backed Trumpâs directive to give the Army-Navy football game an exclusive broadcast window. Carr said in a press release earlier this month that âsuch scheduling conflicts weaken the national focus on our Military Service Academies and detract from a morale-building event of vital interest to the Department of War.â Because, of course, the hallmark of community broadcasting is not letting fans watch their local teams because the Pentagon needs a morale boost for its illegal, unpopular wars.
As a prior version of Carr knew, the FCC cannot police journalism for ideological bias. Localism is a Trojan horse Carr uses to legitimize his attack on the Constitution.
His only serious effort to impact local news undermines it instead by consolidating more local licenses under conglomerates like Nexstar and Sinclair â companies that are ideologically aligned with Trump on national issues but have long track records of ruining local coverage through cost cutting. Carr even bent ownership rules to approve a $6.2 billion NexstarâTegna merger, which a federal judge halted Friday because of harms to local news consumers.
Nexstar is aggressively cutting jobs at flagship stations like WGN in Chicago and KTLA in Los Angeles, even as it lobbies for permission to expand further. Sinclair has decimated local newsrooms across the country, replacing them with centralized national programming â the exact opposite of the localism Carr claims to champion.
The real Brendan Carr is the unrepentant censorship czar who shows up at CPAC and openly threatens broadcasters on X, not the slicker version who rails against coastal elites to change the subject when questioned about his unconstitutional antics.
Carr is among the most shameless bootlickers (or Florsheim dress shoe-lickers) in an administration full of sycophants. The only localities whose interests he serves are the White House and Mar-a-Lago. Heâs the last person who should be policing the âpublic interest,â locally or anywhere.
Analysis
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