How a daytime talk show landed at the centre of a free speech battle
John Koblin And Jim Rutenberg
President Donald Trump’s wide-ranging campaign to punish media critics has come at newspapers including: Wall StreetJournal, Des Moines Register And New York Times; Broadcasting organizations such as BBC, NBC News and CBS News; and late-night hosts Jimmy Kimmel and Stephen Colbert.
But now he is moving on to a new rival, the long-running American ABC daytime talk show, which remains politically powerful and has a prominent place in Trump’s corpus of media grudge matches. Appearance.
The Federal Communications Commission has been quietly investigating the program for months. Appearance violated old federal rules requiring equal airtime with rival political candidates. The investigation could also contribute to the agency’s broader review of whether the ABC (which has no connection to the Australian broadcaster of the same name) should be allowed to continue owning some of the country’s most prominent local television stations.
The conflict between ABC and the Trump administration could lead to a protracted, high-stakes legal battle over free speech. The network claims the FCC action could have a “chilling effect on First Amendment-protected free speech on the eve of the 2026 election” and affect which political guests (if any) book its talk shows.
Central role Appearance It’s a testament to the enduring impact of the old-school television show that ABC host Barbara Walters launched 29 years ago, describing it as “a coffee with more caffeine.” People in both parties say the show continues to wield significant political power even as streaming, podcasting and social media gain more traction.
Appearance It draws 2.7 million viewers a day, according to Nielsen; That’s roughly the same number of viewers it’s had for a decade.
“‘Who’s watching this crap?'” said Tim Graham, a senior leader at the Media Research Center, a conservative group that has long criticized the show. “It would be easy for us to say,” he said. “But the answer is: many people.”
Representatives Appearance He declined to comment or arrange interviews with the presenters or anyone involved in the production.
Walters’ intention, as she said in the first episode in 1997, was to make the show a destination viewing destination for a broad range of women “from different generations, backgrounds and views.” The show’s panel includes a conservative presence to balance the progressiveness of longtime hosts Joy Behar and Whoopi Goldberg.
Trump, who is good friends with Walters, was once a regular guest on the show, seeing it as a great platform to promote himself, his business and his family. During a March 2006 appearance, sitting next to Ivanka Trump, Trump notoriously mused, “If Ivanka wasn’t my daughter, maybe I’d be dating her.” (“Who are you, Woody Allen?” Behar blurted, making Trump burst into laughter.)
Weeks later, Melania Trump gave her first interview to the show since the birth of her son Barron, revealing details about the birth (“very, very easy”) and informing viewers that Donald Trump had chosen to stay away from the delivery room. The Trumps even appeared together sometimes: In 2010, they appeared together while promoting their QVC jewelry line.
However Appearance It also set the stage for a key Trump feud with former host Rosie O’Donnell from 2006. He called him a “snake oil salesman”; called him a “bum” and worse.
The final break in the relationship between the program and Trump came shortly after Trump entered politics. In 2015, he clashed with Goldberg over his description of Mexicans as “rapists” and rejected invitations from the United States. Appearance after this. He played 18 matches in total.
Homeowners became more critical of Trump over the past decade, and he attacked them. The two Republicans on the panel — first-term Trump spokeswoman Alyssa Farah Griffin and longtime strategist Ana Navarro — are frequent critics of Trump. And anti-Trump critics are even harsher.
“It’s amazing to me that there are people who have no healthcare, the Department of Education has been gutted, they can’t afford eggs, and yet they’re still with their man,” co-anchor Sunny Hostin said last week.
Conservatives accuse the show of interviewing mostly Democrats. This spring, the Media Research Center published a report titled “Opinion Search Starts the Year with 27 Liberal Guests and 1 Republican.” (The study also included celebrities in its tally.)
ABC noted in its filing with the FCC that the guest appearances did not represent the full extent of the invitations. The network said the show had invited numerous Trump allies over the past two seasons, including Vice President J.D. Vance, Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Senator Lindsey Graham, Elon Musk and Secretary of State Marco Rubio, all of whom were rejected.
ABC’s lawyers said the bookings were “based on newsworthiness, anticipated audience interest and the potential to ‘make news’ on the programme.”
The administration has increased its attacks over the last year. In July, she released a statement supporting the program’s cancellation after Behar unfavorably compared Trump to former President Barack Obama.
The seriousness of the FCC’s investigation Appearance It emerged last week that ABC responded strongly to this. The agency is investigating whether the show improperly operated outside longstanding broadcast rules that require entertainment programs to provide equal airtime to candidates in the same office.
ABC’s lawyers noted: Appearance He said he received a news exemption from the agency in 2002 and that the exemption has not been challenged in the 24 years since then.
Their response, made public Friday, accused the FCC of violating the network’s First Amendment rights and indicated they were prepared to take the case to the Supreme Court.
The network argues that the mix of its guests should not be a government concern. “Of course, government officials are free to express their own views on this matter. Appearance“But they cannot use the coercive powers of the state to punish viewpoints with which they disagree,” ABC’s lawyers said in the filing.
The show has long been held under a political microscope, not just because of what its hosts say, but also because of the makeup of its audience.
The two highest-scoring media markets AppearancePhiladelphia and the Flint-Saginaw-Bay City market in Michigan’s industrial corridor are both in swing states, according to Nielsen. Nielsen said the show attracted strong audiences in Pittsburgh, Atlanta, Milwaukee, Chicago and New York, as well as West Palm Beach, Florida; Kansas City, Missouri; and Hartford, Connecticut.
This audience consists of premium voting demographics; two-thirds of its audience is 65 or older, and almost 90 percent are over 50. Seventy percent are women. According to Nielsen, 60 percent of its audience is white and a quarter is black.
“Women are one of the most important swing segments of the electorate,” said Daniel Suhr of the Center for American Rights, a conservative legal group that called on the FCC to deny it in March. Appearance exemption from equal airtime rules as a “bona fide” news program.
Suhr said hosts who “constantly attack the president and the party” on a show that appeals to undecided voters “have a real impact on our politics.”
Lis Smith has long been a Democratic strategist. Appearance As an important stop on any major candidate’s campaign schedule, he said he thinks conservatives choose the program mostly to pit loyalists against a favorite media target. But he added: Appearance It has its uses for Democrats.
“They reach a broad base of women, and Democrats need women to vote to win,” she said.
This article was first published on: New York Times.
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