FCC chair threatens to revoke broadcasters’ licenses amid Trump comments on Iran coverage

Federal Communications Commission Chairman Brendan Carr on Saturday renewed his criticism and threats against broadcasters over their content, this time with President Donald Trumpโs criticism of Iran war reporting as the backdrop.
Broadcasters who air โfake newsโ must โcorrect course before their license renewals come up,โ Carr posted on X, in remarks accompanied by a screenshot of Trumpโs Truth Social post earlier in the day accusing the New York Times, Wall Street Journal and โother lowlife โpapersโ and mediaโ of โterrible reportingโ on the U.S. and Israelโs war with Iran.
โBroadcasters must operate in the public interest, and they will lose their licenses if they do not,โ Carr wrote.
The FCC issues licenses for television and radio broadcasters, but does not license TV or radio networks or other organizations stations have relationships with, unless they are licensees. The agency also does not regulate news outlets that have only online and print distribution, such as the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal.
Carr has repeatedly said he wants to enforce the FCCโs public interest obligation for broadcasters that use the public airwaves, which he says the FCC has failed to properly deploy for decades.
On Saturday, he wrote of โhoaxes and distortionsโ during the 2024 presidential campaign and said โthe public has lost faith and confidence in the media.โ By including Trumpโs post, Carr for the first time extended his own criticisms to wartime coverage.
Trump has frequently accused news media outlets of lying when they run stories that he sees as critical of him, and he has previously called for removing the licenses of broadcast outlets he views as unfair.
Democratic lawmakers and a few prominent Republicans have criticized the Trump administrationโs pressure campaign against broadcasters. Carr has argued that polls showing widespread distrust of the media support his stance.
