FCC to order early license reviews of Disney-owned ABC stations, source says

The Federal Communications Commission is set to order early reviews of eight ​Disney-owned ABC stations as soon as Tuesday in a dramatic escalation of the Trump administration's fight with major media outlets, a source told Reuters.

The Federal Communications Commission is set to order early reviews of eight ​Disney-owned ABC stations as soon as Tuesday in a dramatic escalation of the Trump administration's fight with major media outlets, a source told Reuters. (Dado Ruvic, Reuters illustration)


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KEY TAKEAWAYS
  • The FCC planned early reviews of eight Disney-owned ABC stations' licenses.
  • This follows Trump's pressure on the FCC over objectionable programming.

WASHINGTON — The Federal Communications Commission is set to order early reviews of eight Disney-owned ABC stations as early as Tuesday, in a dramatic escalation of the Trump administration's fight with major media outlets, a source told Reuters.

The reviews — which could lead the FCC to seek to revoke the stations' licenses to operate on broadcast airwaves — come in the wake of the White House call to fire ABC late-night host Jimmy Kimmel but are not directly tied to that, the source added. The FCC, ‌an independent federal agency, issues eight-year licenses to individual broadcast stations, and ⁠has not revoked a broadcast TV station ⁠license in more than 40 years.

Kimmel remained on the air Monday despite criticism from President Donald Trump over a joke that he delivered prior to a shooting near a gathering of journalists and politicians over the weekend.

Trump has repeatedly pressured the FCC to revoke the licenses of Comcast-owned NBC and ABC ‌stations over programming he has found objectionable.

Disney did not ​immediately comment on Tuesday.

The licenses were not scheduled for review by the FCC until Oct. 2028 and follow a more than year-long investigation into Disney and ABC's diversity practices.

Anna Gomez, a Democratic FCC commissioner, said on Tuesday that the reviews are unlawful.

"This is unprecedented, unlawful, and going nowhere. This political stunt won't stick," Gomez said. "Companies should challenge it head-on. The First Amendment is ​on their side."

Reuters first reported in March that Carr was considering early reviews of the licenses. ‌Asked last month ‌if he could ⁠seek to revoke any broadcast licenses as a result of pending investigations, Carr said it was possible.

"All of that stuff is on the table," said Carr, a Republican appointed by Trump in 2025. He said he thought it would be a "good ‌thing long-term to make sure ​people understand that there are, in fact, things ‌you can do to ⁠lose your license ​and really help broadcasters reorient their operations to the public interest."

The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.

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