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ABC Accuses Trump's FCC of Chilling Free Speech in "The View" Equal Time Probe

ABC Accuses Trump's FCC of Chilling Free Speech in "The View" Equal Time Probe

In a major legal escalation, ABC has formally accused the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) of violating the First Amendment. In a letter signed by renowned Supreme Court litigator Paul Clement, the network argues that the Trump administration is weaponizing regulatory power to "chill" political discussion and upend decades of established media law.

The conflict centers on an inquiry into "The View," ABC's long-running daytime talk show. Chairman Brendan Carr has recently questioned whether the program truly qualifies for news exemptions that have protected it from "equal time" requirements since 2002.

The "Equal Time" Controversy

At the heart of the government’s scrutiny is the Equal Time Rule. Traditionally, this rule requires broadcast stations to provide equivalent airtime to all legally qualified candidates for a specific office if one candidate is featured. However, "bona fide news interview programs" are exempt.

ABC’s legal team argues that the FCC is overstepping its authority by reconsidering this status. Clement’s letter notes that the American people need more access to political candidates as the 2026 midterm elections approach, not less.

“Uncertainty as to the scope of broadcast licensees’ editorial discretion threatens to limit news coverage of political candidates and chill core First Amendment-protected speech for years and potentially decades to come,” Clement wrote.

Retaliation or Regulation?

The timing of the FCC’s move has raised eyebrows across the industry. The legal filing comes just one week after the agency called up eight of ABC’s station licenses for early renewal—licenses that weren't set to expire until 2028.

Critics, including the New York Times and the lone Democratic FCC Commissioner Anna Gomez, suggest this is a "pressure campaign." The license challenge arrived exactly one day after President Trump publicly urged ABC to fire late-night host Jimmy Kimmel, a request the network ignored.

The timeline of Disney’s DEI Probe:

  • Fall 2025: Disney produces over 6,200 pages of documents for a Carr-led diversity probe.

  • Spring 2026: After five months of silence, the FCC requests nearly 5,000 more pages.

  • One Week Later: The FCC moves to challenge ABC’s broadcast licenses early.

"Courage Over Capitulation"

While Chairman Carr maintains the license reviews are a "natural progression" of his investigation into Disney’s diversity initiatives, legal experts note that license challenges are typically reserved for fraud or egregious misconduct.

Commissioner Anna Gomez praised Disney’s decision to fight back on social media, stating, “The days of the FCC as a paper tiger are numbered... I’m glad Disney is choosing courage over capitulation.”

As the 2026 midterms loom, the resulting administrative proceedings are expected to drag on for months, potentially allowing various groups to file "petitions to deny" based on the content of shows like The View and Jimmy Kimmel Live!.

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By: CNN Newsource

May 8, 2026

ABC vs FCC lawsuit 2026The View equal time rule probeBrendan Carr Disney DEI probePaul Clement ABC lawyerTrump broadcast license threatsJimmy Kimmel ABC retaliation2026 midterm election free speechFirst Amendment broadcast law
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ABC Accuses Trump's FCC of Chilling Free Speech in "The View" Equal Time Probe