President Donald Trump speaks to the media after signing executive orders in the Oval Office at the White House on April 23, 2025, in Washington, D.C.ย 
President Donald Trump speaks to the media after signing executive orders in the Oval Office at the White House on April 23, 2025, in Washington, D.C.ย  Credit: Chip Somodevilla

Dawn DeAngelis and Jim Schachter saw it coming.

Schachter, president and CEO of New Hampshire Public Radio, reassuredย his staff on Friday morning that an executive orderย signed by President Donald Trump the previous eveningย was โ€œmainly political theater,โ€ part of a โ€œwhole slew of actions that the administration and some members of Congress are attempting to advance their goal of eliminating federal funding forย public media and to advance, more broadly, their attacks on press freedomย in the U.S.โ€

The mandate, titled โ€œEnding taxpayer subsidization of biased media,โ€ย orders the Corporation for Public Broadcasting to cease providing direct and indirect federal funding to NPR and PBS and to cut off the media outletsโ€™ access to community service grants for the year.ย Trumpโ€™s executive order comes afterย NPR CEO Katherine Maher and PBS CEO Paula Kerger testified at a DOGE subcommittee hearing in March, where Georgia Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene called for the defunding of both organizations.

Whileย member stations in larger media markets may not suffer significant revenue losses from axedย federal funding, many rural stations fund up to 50% of their budgets with federal dollars allocated through the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and, consequently, stand to lose a large portion of their revenue, experts say.

Atย the only public radio station in New Hampshire,ย Schachter said the news outlet receives only a small fraction of its funding from the CPB, about 6% of its revenue. Nonetheless, he is developing a contingency plan, as is DeAngelis,ย vice president and chief operating officer of New Hampshire PBS.

NHPBSย estimates that about 18% of its annual budget, or $1.3 million,ย is at risk.

โ€œWe’re preparing as much for the eventuality of something happening, but also the fight,โ€ย DeAngelis said.

The funds NHPBS receives through the CPB are utilized to support the stationโ€™s technology infrastructure, including the Emergency Broadcast System, which is used to issue emergency and amber alerts, and to allow the station to pay its PBS annual dues.

Congress has forward-funded CPB funding toย PBS and NPR stations for the 2025 and 2026 fiscal years, DeAngelis explained, and her station hasย already received and spent the funding for FY25, which ends June 30, 2025. The funds that are in question, if the executive order were to stand,ย are FY26, FY27 and FY28.

The executive order was especially mystifying to DeAngelis, considering her stationโ€™s role in producing non-news programs andย nonpartisan childrenโ€™s entertainment. In the U.S., 50% of children who are homeschooled and those withoutย access to preschoolย learn the fundamentals from PBS programming, she said.ย 

โ€œIf you look at what PBS does, it educates, it informs, it engages,โ€ DeAngelis said. โ€œI cannot rationalize [the executive order]. Itโ€™s not based in fact. Itโ€™s not who we are.โ€

Schachter,ย like DeAngelis, saidย the executive orderโ€™s very premise โ€” that neither NPR or PBSย โ€œpresents a fair, accurate, or unbiased portrayal of current events to taxpaying citizensโ€ โ€” is false. But, knowing that past is prologue, he wasnโ€™t as surprised byย the Trump administrationโ€™s assault on public media.

The CBP was created by Congress in 1967 with the specific intention,ย Schachter said,ย of insulating public media from political interference. Every conservative president since then, beginning with Richard Nixon, has tried to fell the organization and cripple the stations it funds to no avail.

For many years, public broadcastingย enjoyed modest growth, even as the print journalism industry contracted.

โ€œEven as newspapers found it increasingly difficult to come up with an economic model that worked for them, it seemed that public media and public radio, in particular, were almost immune to those problems. Aย lot of it had to do with the distribution model โ€” people are stuck in their cars listening to the radio,โ€ explainedย Dan Kennedy, media ethics expert and journalism professor at Northeastern University.ย 

During the COVID-19 pandemic and the ensuing shift to working from home, public radio began suffering losses in regular listenership, bringing economic problems beyond the threats made by Trump. Even so, public media continued to offer, through fundraising from donors and, recognizably, viewers and listenersย โ€œlike you,โ€ free quality journalism.

โ€œWe are operating in an era where the best, most reliable news has fallen behind pay walls, and if you canโ€™t afford to pay for newsย or if youโ€™re not inclined to pay for news, you end up being increasingly subjected to misinformation and disinformation,โ€ said Kennedy. โ€œIt seems to me that public radio in particular has remained as an incredibly vital and important source of reliable news and information that you donโ€™t have to pay for.โ€

Kennedy pushed back on the notion that NPR and PBSโ€™s news coverage exhibits a political slant.

โ€œObjectivityย is the fair-minded pursuit of the truth โ€” itโ€™s not balance,โ€ he said.

From where he stands, Schachter believes NPR has made strides to speak a more politically inclusive language and root out bias, wherever it might exist.

After former NPR editor Uri Berliner departed the organization, writing in a right-wing publication that the station had begun platformingย โ€œthe distilled worldview of a very small segment of the U.S. population,โ€ NPR announced an initiative to implement additional layers of editing.ย Itย expanded its Standards and Practices team and created a group of senior editors called the โ€œBackstopโ€ whose work would be โ€œ24/7 to ensure that all coverage receives final editorial review,โ€ according to an Inside NPR memo from May 2024.

Regardless of whether allegations of bias are warranted, the executive order likely will not take effect without legal challenges.

In a brief statement,ย Patricia Harrison, president and CEO of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, said โ€œCPB is not a federal executive agency subject to the Presidentโ€™s authority. Congress directly authorized and funded CPB to be a private nonprofit corporation wholly independent of the federal government.โ€

โ€œIn creating CPB, Congress expressly forbade โ€˜any department, agency, officer, or employee of the United States to exercise any direction, supervision, or control over educational television or radio broadcasting, or over [CPB] or any of its grantees or contractorsโ€ฆโ€™ 47 U.S.C. ยง 398(c),โ€ the statement concluded.

ย 

Rebeca Pereira can be reached at rpereira@cmonitor.com

Rebeca Pereira is the news editor at the Concord Monitor. She reports on farming, food insecurity, animal welfare and the towns of Canterbury, Tilton and Northfield. Reach her at rpereira@cmonitor.com