NPR, PBS
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What's next for NPR, PBS and public media after Congress voted to defund the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.
Opinion
2dOpinion
The Daily Caller on MSNNPR CEO Katherine Maher Still Wants You To Believe Her Network Isn’t Completely BiasedCEO Katherine Maher tried to convince the public on Thursday that her network has no political slant at all. Maher denied any bias on “CNN News Central” despite her network having a long history of publishing politically slanted headlines that favored the political left and refusing to correct false narratives.
NPR and PBS outlets, including several in Southern California, will have to make tough decisions as the U.S. Senate votes to claw back money previously allocated for their operations.
2don MSNOpinion
The Senate voting to cancel $1.1 billion in public funding for NPR and PBS is not an attack on the free press.
Missouri Republican Sen. Eric Schmitt reads some of NPR CEO Katherine Maher's most absurd tweets to celebrate the Senate voting to end taxpayer funding for public broadcasting: "I'm so done with late-stage capitalism.
2don MSN
UPDATED, with additional comments: PBS, NPR and public stations are facing the loss of $1.1 billion in federal funding, as the House cleared final passage of a package of cuts likely to alter the landscape of public media.
2don MSN
The rescissions revised package passed by a vote of 51-48, with Republican Sens. Susan Collins and Lisa Murkowski joining Democrats in voting against it.