Disney’s ABC challenges FCC, escalating fight over free speech
Walt Disney Co.βs ABC is forcefully resisting Federal Communications Commission efforts to soften the networkβs programming, accusing the federal agency of an overreach that violates 1st Amendment freedoms.
Last week, the FCC took the unusual step of calling in the licenses of eight Disney-owned television stations for early review. The move β widely interpreted as an effort to chill the networkβs speech β came a day after President Trump demanded that ABC fire late-night talk show host Jimmy Kimmel over a joke about First Lady Melania Trump.
The FCC separately has taken aim at ABCβs daytime discussion show, βThe View,β which delves deeply into politics.
The FCC has questioned whether the show, which prominently features Trump critics Whoopi Goldberg and Joy Behar, could continue toclaim an exemption to rules that require broadcasters to provide equal time for opponents of political candidates.
In its filing this week with the FCC, Disneyβs Houston television station raised the stakes in the dispute over βThe View,β calling the commissionβs actions βunprecedentedβ and βbeyond the Commissionβs authority.β The ABC stationβs petition for a declaratory ruling said βThe View,β has long qualified as a βbona fideβ news interview program with freedom to conduct interviews of legally qualified political candidates.
βThe Commissionβs actions threaten to upend decades of settled law and practice and chill critical protected speech, both with respect to The View and more broadly,β the Houston station KTRK-TV said in the filing.
The networkβs firm stance sets up a clash with the Trump administration, including the presidentβs hand-picked FCC Chairman Brendan Carr, who has made no secret of his disdain for Kimmel and other ABC programming. Earlier this year, Carr announced that decades-old exemptions from the so-called βequal time ruleβ for news programs, including βThe View,β were no longer valid.
ABCβs strenuous arguments mark a departure for the Disney-owned outlet.
In December 2024, a month after Trump was elected to a second term, the network quickly settled a lawsuit over statements made by news anchor George Stephanopoulos that Trump found offensive. ABC agreed to pay Trump $15 million to end his legal fight β sparking an outcry among free speech advocates, who accused the network of caving on a case it could have won.
βSome may dislike certainβor even mostβof the viewpoints expressed on The View or similar shows,β the station said in its filing. βSuch dislike, however, cannot justify using regulatory processes to restrict those views. The government does not get to decide βwhat shall be orthodox in politics, nationalism, religion, or other matters of opinion.ββ
The station noted that, while the FCC has questioned the exemption for βThe View,β which dates back to 2002, the FCC hasnβt showed interest in regulating programs on other networks, βincluding the many voices β conservative and liberal β on broadcast radio.β
βThe danger is that the government will simply decide which perspectives to regulate and which to leave undisturbed,β ABC said.
On April 28, Carr called for a review of Disneyβs broadcast licenses two years before any of them were set to expire, citing the agencyβs year-old inquiry into Disneyβs diversity, equity and inclusion policies and whether they violated federal anti-discrimination rules.