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Senate approves cuts to NPR, PBS and foreign aid programs

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., arrives to speak with reporters about Senate Republicans' efforts to claw back $1.1 billion of funding authority from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and about $8.3 billion from foreign aid programs targeted by DOGE, at the Capitol in Washington, Tuesday, July 15, 2025.
J. Scott Applewhite
/
AP
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., arrives to speak with reporters about Senate Republicans' efforts to claw back $1.1 billion of funding authority from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and about $8.3 billion from foreign aid programs targeted by DOGE, at the Capitol in Washington, Tuesday, July 15, 2025.

Updated July 17, 2025 at 6:24 AM MDT

The Senate has approved the Trump administration's $9 billion rescission package aimed at clawing back money already allocated for public radio and television — a major step toward winding down nearly six decades of federal funding for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.

CPB stands to lose $1.1 billion dollars meant to fund it through the next two years, while the bill also cuts $7.9 billion in other programs. CPB acts as a conduit for federal money to NPR, PBS and their member stations.

In a marathon "vote-a-rama" session that lasted into the small hours Thursday, senators introduced numerous amendments, before ultimately voting 51-to-48 to approve the package that includes cuts to foreign food and health programs. One senator, Minnesota's Tina Smith, was not present at the vote due to hospitalization.

The senate's approval of the cuts tees up a final showdown in the House, which approved an earlier version last month.

The Senate vote was largely along party lines, with Democrats voting against the bill and all but two Republicans voting for it. The GOP exceptions were Maine's Susan Collins and Alaska's Lisa Murkowski. Kentucky Republican Sen. Mitch McConnell, who voted on Tuesday not to advance debate on the bill, prompting Vice President JD Vance to cast a tie-breaking vote, nonetheless approved the final measure.

In a statement immediately after the vote, NPR CEO Katherine Maher said: "Nearly 3-in-4 Americans say they rely on their public radio stations for alerts and news for their public safety," adding, "We call on the House of Representatives to reject this elimination of public media funding, which directly harms their communities and constituents, and could very well place lives at risk."

In a separate statement, Kate Riley, president and CEO of America's Public Television Stations, said the organization was "devastated that the Senate voted to eliminate federal funding to the local public television stations throughout this country that provide essential lifesaving public safety services, proven educational services and community connections to their communities every day for free."

During the voting, motions by Democrats to carve out funding for NPR, PBS and their member stations from the package were largely symbolic, as Republicans had the numbers.

In one of the late proposed amendments, Murkowski sought to restore CPB funding while barring any federal money from going to NPR. She mentioned a 7.3-magnitude earthquake that struck the Alaska Peninsula and Kodiak Island on Wednesday and an alert she'd received from public radio station KUCB in Unalaska, in the Aleutian islands.

"I'm looking at a text that I received from the station manager there," she said relating how the station's three staff members broadcast emergency messages despite a tsunami warning that was later lifted. The text said the local community was instructed to listen to the local public radio station, she said.

"I have an amendment that protects public media, their independence, their ability to provide local news, weather reports and, yes, emergency alerts," Murkowski said. "We're reminded today this stuff matters, so I would hope my colleagues would recognize what is at stake and vote for my amendment."

But a majority voted against it.

Earlier, Wisconsin Democrat Sen. Tammy Baldwin said that if the cuts to public broadcasting stand, "local television and radio stations will shut down — and it will be rural stations that will be the first to close."

"These issues were not even raised as a part of our appropriation process during the past two years," Baldwin said. "So to take this extraordinary step and say that these issues are now so grave and so urgent that we have to address them like this — what are we doing here?"

Republican Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas, speaking against the Baldwin motion, said public broadcasting "has long been overtaken by partisan activists. Plain and simple."

"NPR and PBS have revealed their left-wing bias time and time again," he said. "If you want to watch the left-wing propaganda, turn on MSNBC. But the taxpayers should not be forced to subsidize it."

Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-SD, noted that the U.S. is $36 trillion in debt. "What we are talking about here is 1/10 of 1% of all federal spending," he said. "But it's a step in the right direction."

The White House sent the request to Congress in early June — the first such rescission in more than a quarter century. The House quickly passed it and is expected to approve the Senate changes before a midnight Friday deadline. That deadline marks 45 days since President Trump sent the rescission request to Congress. By law, Congress is required to either affirm the cuts or do nothing and allow the money to be restored after the deadline.

Since the election, Trump and GOP lawmakers have stepped up attacks on NPR and PBS, with the president writing on his social media platform this week that "[a]ny Republican that votes to allow this monstrosity to continue broadcasting will not have my support or Endorsement."

In April, Maher, the NPR CEO, and PBS CEO and President Paula Kerger testified on Capitol Hill before the House subcommittee on government efficiency chaired by Georgia Republican Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene. The executives defended public media against charges of political bias, but Greene concluded the hearing by saying: "We believe that you all can hate us on your own dime."

NPR, which produces news programs Morning Edition and All Things Considered, gets about 1% of its funding directly from the federal government. Its member stations, which operate over 1,300 outlets, receive about 8% to 10% of their funding from the federal government. With its nightly PBS News Hour and high-quality children's programming, such as Daniel Tiger's Neighborhood, PBS and its stations get around 15% of their revenue.

Leaders in the public broadcasting community have warned that losing CPB funding would cripple small stations, especially in rural areas underserved by commercial media, and weaken the entire public media network.

A Harris Poll conducted last week on behalf of NPR found that overall two-thirds (66%) of Americans support federal funding for public radio, with the same proportion agreeing that such funding is a good value for taxpayers. More than half of Republicans (58%) and more than three-quarters of Democrats (77%) said they support public radio funding. The online poll served 2,089 U.S. adults, with a margin of error of +/- 2.5%.

The House version of the bill includes eliminating $7.9 billion in foreign aid funding, including for PEPFAR, the U.S. AIDS relief initiative initiated under President George W. Bush. But Collins, who chairs the appropriations committee, along with other Republicans emphasized that cutting life-saving foreign aid programs such as PEPFAR went too far. They decided to exclude the program from the final Senate version.

Murkowski was among a handful of Republicans in rural states who expressed concern about losing funding for public radio stations that cater to under-served populations. Among them, South Dakota Republican Sen. Mike Rounds on Tuesday announced that he had struck a deal for the White House to divert Green New Deal money to funding 28 stations serving Native American listeners in nine states.

But in a letter to Rounds, Native Public Radio President and CEO Loris Taylor called the compromise "structurally impractical," adding that while the network appreciates the efforts to sustain Tribal media, "The Green New Deal is primarily a framework for climate and economic reform, not a dedicated funding source for communications infrastructure or media services."

Disclosure: This story was written and reported by NPR Correspondent Scott Neuman and Congressional Correspondent Deirdre Walsh. It was edited by Managing Editor Gerry Holmes. Under NPR's protocol for reporting on itself, no corporate official or news executive reviewed this story before it was posted publicly.

Copyright 2025 NPR

Scott Neuman
Scott Neuman is a correspondent for NPR's Enterprise Desk, based in Washington, D.C.
Deirdre Walsh
Deirdre Walsh is a congressional correspondent for NPR's Washington Desk.