The Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB) announced on Friday that it will shut down operations, ending over 60 years of public media funding.
The move comes after President Donald Trump and Republican lawmakers succeeded in eliminating federal support for the organization.
Trump recently signed a rescissions bill canceling $9 billion in previously approved government spending. Of that amount, $1.1 billion had been allocated to CPB for the next two years.
Trump has long criticized public media as “biased” against conservatives and made repeated efforts to cut its funding.
“Despite the extraordinary efforts of millions of Americans who called, wrote, and petitioned Congress to preserve federal funding for CPB, we now face the difficult reality of closing our operations,” said CPB President and CEO Patricia Harrison.
“CPB remains committed to fulfilling its fiduciary responsibilities and supporting our partners through this transition with transparency and care.”
The organization is now focused on helping local PBS and NPR stations—especially those in rural areas—prepare for the resulting budget shortfalls.
Harrison previously warned that some stations could be forced to close entirely.
Larger outlets may survive with help from donors and other revenue streams, but public media leaders say the national network will be severely weakened.
“The ripple effects of this closure will be felt across every public media organization and, more importantly, in every community across the country that relies on public broadcasting,” said NPR CEO Katherine Maher.
The CPB expects to eliminate most of its 100 staff positions by September 30, when the current funding expires.
A small transition team will remain until January to oversee a “responsible and orderly closeout of operations.”
The shutdown marks a political win for Trump, who has pushed for defunding CPB since the start of his presidency. Earlier this year, he tried to remove three board members, despite lacking legal authority under the 1967 law that created the corporation.
CPB filed a lawsuit to block that attempt, but on Friday, it voluntarily dropped the case—effectively conceding defeat.
“REPUBLICANS HAVE TRIED DOING THIS FOR 40 YEARS, AND FAILED… BUT NO MORE,” Trump posted on Truth Social, celebrating the bill’s passage through the GOP-controlled House and Senate.
Some advocates had hoped that Congress might still restore funding through the usual budget process.
However, a draft Senate bill released Thursday included no CPB funding—suggesting those hopes are now unlikely to materialize.
Trump and other Republicans argue that defunding CPB is a stand against liberal influence in public broadcasting.
Public media supporters say the move undermines civic life and access to reliable news.
“The end of CPB is the direct result of the deep and corrupt failure of Congress and the Trump administration to invest in informing the American public,” said Craig Aaron, co-CEO of media advocacy group Free Press.
“They have trashed decades of democracy-building work and will deny many journalists, artists, educators and creators the opportunity to be heard.”
Aaron said he still believes there’s a chance to rebuild publicly funded media from the ground up. He called for a new system “as a bulwark against authoritarianism that meets the civic needs of all our communities.”
Some broadcasters are already mobilizing support. In Boston, GBH put up a sign reading, “Local. Trusted. Defunded.”
“We’re not backing down,” the station said in a fundraising message. “But we can’t do it without you. Donate now to keep public media strong and independent.”
(CNN)
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