Key facts
- Conservative organizations have petitioned the FCC to deny license renewals for eight ABC-owned television stations.
- The petitions accuse ABC of political, racial, and sexual bias, and supporting the Chinese Communist Party.
- The FCC, led by Brendan Carr, accelerated the license renewal process for ABC stations.
- Groups like the Center for American Rights, Media Research Center, Article III Project, and America First Legal filed petitions.
- The FCC is also investigating 'The View' for potential equal time violations.
- Deadlines for opposition and replies to the petitions have been set for July 29 and August 5, respectively.
A coalition of conservative organizations has formally petitioned the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to deny the license renewal requests for eight local television stations owned by ABC. The groups accuse the network of exhibiting political, racial, and sexual bias, and of supporting the Chinese Communist Party.
The petitions follow an unusual decision by the FCC, under the leadership of Commissioner Brendan Carr, to require ABC to apply for renewal several years ahead of schedule. While Carr stated the early renewal process is linked to an FCC investigation into ABC's diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) efforts, the petitioners are leveraging this opportunity to voice a broader range of grievances.
Groups such as the Center for American Rights, Media Research Center, Article III Project, and America First Legal have submitted petitions. The Center for American Rights argues that ABC stations are not operating in the public interest due to perceived partisan bias in programs like late-night shows and presidential debate moderation, as well as alleged racial and gender discrimination. The Media Research Center claims ABC has abused its licenses, engaged in electioneering, promoted misinformation, and incited violence.
The Article III Project, founded by Mike Davis, specifically targeted Disney's (ABC's parent company) employment practices, alleging violations of federal Equal Employment Opportunity law. America First Legal, co-founded by Stephen Miller, asserted that ABC stations lack the necessary character qualifications for broadcast licenses.
The FCC's accelerated timeline was reportedly prompted by White House calls for Jimmy Kimmel's ouster over a joke about Melania Trump. Additionally, the FCC is examining whether the talk show 'The View' violated equal time provisions concerning political candidates following an appearance by Texas Democratic Senate candidate James Talarico.
The FCC has established July 29 as the deadline for opposition to these petitions, with a final reply deadline of August 5. Following these dates, the matter may be escalated to an administrative law judge for a trial-like hearing or be decided by the FCC commissioners themselves. Commissioner Carr indicated that the review and appeal process has no set timeline.