JD Vance has leveled a new threat against TV networks, questioning whether some should keep their broadcast licenses.
In an interview with Fox Newsâ Laura Ingraham Thursday, the vice president dismissed the outcry over free speech that followed ABCâs temporary suspension of Jimmy Kimmel Live! amid threats from Trump-appointed FCC Chair Brendan Carr.
âIâd like them to tell me exactly what Brendan Carr did to have Jimmy Kimmel taken off the air,â Vance said. âI think that Brendan Carr put out a couple of tweets or a couple of truths, or whatever he did, that does not constitute government coercion.â
âI actually think that we should be having a conversation about whether these companies are serving the public interest,â Vice President JD Vance said. Doug Mills-Pool/Getty Images
But there was more to it than a couple of tweets. Hours before ABC pulled Kimmel last week, Carr suggested the FCC could revoke ABCâs broadcasting license over a joke the host had made about Charlie Kirkâs assassin.
âWe can do this the easy way or the hard way,â Carr said. âThese companies can find ways to take action on Kimmel or there is going to be additional work for the FCC ahead.â
Vance told Ingraham, âThese broadcast companiesâABC, NBC, CBSâthey enjoy the public airwaves because they serve the public interest,â repeating a point Carr had used to pressure ABC to âtake actionâ on Kimmel.
âSo I actually think that we should be having a conversation about whether these companies are serving the public interest,â he said.
Trump-appointed FCC Chair Brendan Carr last week threatened to inflict punishment on ABC if it did not reprimand Kimmel for his comments on Charlie Kirk’s assassination. Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images
Unlike cable channels such as CNN, Fox News, and MSNBC, broadcast stations affiliated with or owned by networks like ABC, NBC, and CBS are required to obtain licenses from the federal government.
The FCC can regulate broadcasting and requires networks âby law to operate its station in the âpublic interest, convenience and necessity,â according to the agencyâs website.
President Donald Trump last week complained that â97 percentâ of networks are against him, and said, âI think maybe their license should be taken away.â
President Donald Trump told reporters last week that networks should get their licenses revoked because âall they do is hit Trump.â Alexander Drago/REUTERS
He complained that âWhen you go back and take a look, all they do is hit Trump. Theyâre licensed. Theyâre not allowed to do that.â
Vance said his doubts about whether networks merit federal licenses are âactually totally separate from the Jimmy Kimmel issue because nothing happened to him. Heâs currently on the air.â
ABC resumed airing âJimmy Kimmel Live!â Tuesday, although MAGA-friendly affiliate giants Sinclair and Nexstar have continued to preempt the show. REUTERS/Mario Anzuoni
The 41-year-old vice president, who was close to Kirk, called on Kimmel to apologize to the late right-wing activistâs wife Erika and âto all of the people that he slandered,â arguing that the host had accused âright-wing Americaâ of killing Kirk.
Kimmel, whose show returned to the air on Tuesday, had suggested during his Sept. 15 monologue that Kirkâs alleged assassin, 22-year-old Tyler Robinson, was connected to the âMAGA gang.â