Trump rails against Kimmel’s return to late-night show
The return of Jimmy Kimmel to ABCโs airwaves flipped the political script, for a time aligning the late-night comedian with several conservative figures who staunchly disagree with federal regulators trying to shut him down over free speech โ even as President Trump continued to threaten the network.
โI want to thank the people who donโt support my show and what I believe, but support my right to share those beliefs anyway,โ Kimmel told viewers during his opening monologue Tuesday night.
Trump in recent days has ramped up efforts to stifle his political opposition and what he perceives to be liberal bias in media coverage through lawsuits and regulatory actions, a move that has increasingly concerned the presidentโs supporters and influential conservative personalities.
The firestorm over free speech came in the wake of comments Kimmel made about how the โMAGA gangโ was trying to score political points from Charlie Kirkโs slaying. On a conservative podcast, Brendan Carr, a Trump loyalist who heads the Federal Communications Commission, accused Kimmel of โthe sickest conductโ and suggested there could be regulatory consequences for local television stations whose programming did not serve the public interest.
After Disney took โJimmy Kimmel Live!โ off the air at ABC last week, some high-profile Trump allies worried the threat of regulating speech was taking it too far โ and that conservatives could be next if the federal government were to follow through.
โIf we embrace the FCC stripping licenses from anyone who says something you disagree with, the next Democrat president who gets in the White House will do this and will come after everyone right of center,โ Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas), a critic of Kimmelโs, said Wednesday on his podcast, โVerdict With Ted Cruz,โ reaffirming previous comments in which he likened Carrโs threats to mafia-like maneuvers. โThat is a slippery slope to oblivion.โ
Trump, however, was dismayed by Kimmelโs return and threatened legal action, following a pattern in which he has sued major media outlets over negative coverage of him.
โI think we are going to test ABC out on this. Letโs see how we do,โ Trump wrote late Tuesday on his social media platform, suggesting a lawsuit against the network could potentially lead to a โlucrativeโ settlement. โA true bunch of losers! Let Jimmy Kimmel rot in his bad Ratings.โ
Combined, Trumpโs legal threats and Carrโs comments have fueled a sharp debate about free speech, and whether Trump and Carr are trying to level the playing field for conservative voices or launching a coordinated and illegal attack to silence liberal ones. As a result, Carr โ the author of an FCC chapter in the right-wing Project 2025 playbook โ has landed in a glaring media spotlight and as the target of a congressional inquiry.
Sen. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) and eight other Democratic senators wrote a letter to Carr on Wednesday expressing โgrave concernโ over the FCCโs apparent role in Kimmelโs suspension, and demanded answers about the role the agency played in it and its justification.
โThe FCCโs regulatory authority over broadcast licenses was never intended to serve as a weapon to silence criticism or punish satirical commentary,โ the senators wrote. โYour agencyโs mission is to serve the public interest, not to act as an enforcement arm for political retribution against media outlets that displease those in power.โ
California Atty. Gen. Rob Bonta has also written to Carr, accusing the Trump administration of โwaging a dangerous attack on those who dare to speak out against itโ and calling on Carr to recommit to defending free speech, including by disavowing his previous remarks about Kimmel.
In the days after Kimmel was sidelined, Cruz and other influential conservatives, who have long trashed the longtime late-night host, voiced opposition to his situation based on concerns that the FCC may be trying to regulate speech on the airwaves.
โYou donโt have to like what somebody says on TV to agree that the government shouldnโt be getting involved here,โ former Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky said on a social media post Monday.
Podcast host Joe Rogan said he did not โthink the government should be involved, ever, in dictating what a comedian can or cannot say in a monologueโ โ and told conservatives they are โcrazyโ if they donโt think such tactics could be โusedโ against them. Candace Owens, a far-right influencer, said Kimmelโs suspension was an attack on free speech, and said she does not agree with the government controlling what can be said.
Ben Shapiro raised concerns about potential government overreach.
โI donโt want the FCC in the business of telling local affiliated that their licenses will be removed if they broadcast material that the FCC deems to be informationally false,โ Shapiro said, warning that โone day the shoe will be on the other foot.โ
Conservative podcaster Tucker Carlson said last week he does not want to see โbad actorsโ use Kirkโs killing as a means to restrict free speech, which he said is a cornerstone of Kirkโs legacy.
โYou hope a year from now, the turmoil weโre seeing in the aftermath of his murder wonโt be leveraged to bring hate speech laws to this country,โ Carlson said.
In his opening monologue, Kimmel touched on the same theme. He said Carrโs tactics were โun-Americanโ and likened them to what happens in authoritarian countries such as Russia.
โThis show is not important,โ he said. โWhat is important is that we get to live in a country that allows us to have a show like this.โ
On the podcast last week, Carr called Kimmelโs remarks about Kirkโs alleged shooter โsome of the sickest conduct possible.โ He then said: โFrankly, when you see stuff like this, we can do this the easy way or the hard way. There are ways to change conduct, to take action, frankly, on Kimmel, or thereโs going to be additional work for the FCC ahead.โ
On Monday, Carr denied claims that he threatened to pull television stationsโ licenses and that he played a role in Kimmelโs suspension, saying โthat didnโt happen in any way, shape or form.โ
โTheyโre completely misrepresenting the work of the FCC and what weโve been doing,โ he said during a conference in New York, accusing Democrats of engaging in a โcampaign of projection and distortion.โ
Carr said the FCC wants to empower local television station owners to โpush back on national programmers, even when they think thereโs some content that they donโt think in their judgment โ not my judgment, but their judgment โ makes sense for the local communities.โ
What happened with Kimmel, Carr said, is that local television stations โfor the first time in a long time stood up and said, โWe donโt want to run that program, at least right now.โโ He said Disney, a national programmer, then made its own business decision not to air Kimmel for a few days.
After Disney brought back the show, station owners Sinclair Broadcast Group and Nexstar Media Group said they would not be running it on their ABC affiliates, hinting to future conflicts that could play out in the media landscape.
Carr opened his Project 2025 chapter on the FCC by writing that the agency should โpromote freedom of speech,โ but has also sided with Trump in criticizing broadcasters for allegedly showing bias against conservatives and said that he would use the agencyโs power to ensure that they better serve the โpublic interest.โ
Bob Shrum, director of the USC Dornsife Center for the Political Future, said the political brawl over Kimmel has been interesting to watch โ in part because of the bipartisan backlash to the suspension and the administrationโs apparent influence on it.
โIโm encouraged by the fact that itโs not just Democrats who complained about this, itโs Republicans like Ted Cruz,โ Shrum said. โThat at least begins to set a deterrent for the federal government going too far on this.โ
While Trump was angered by Kimmelโs return, Shrum found it notable that his social media post ended with the line: โLet Jimmy Kimmel rot in his bad Ratings.โ It showed the limits the president sees on his power to wipe Kimmel from the airwaves, he said.
โThatโs not the kind of last line that says, โWeโre coming after you,โโ Shrum said.