Trump's OMB Director Quietly Calls Out the Republicans Threatening to Derail the 'Big,...
Liberal Amnesty Group Inadvertently Makes Great Case for the Trump's 'Big, Beautiful Bill'
Wait, Trump Is Up By *How Much* Now? Dems Are Going to Implode.
Here Are Some of the People Who Owe Special Counsel Robert Hur an...
Four Trump Officials Pen NYT Op-Ed Calling for This Commonsense Reform
FBI Investigates Fertility Center Explosion, Not Ruling Out 'Act of Terrorism'
Trump, Putin to Talk to End 'Bloodbath' in Ukraine
Conservatives Slam Leaked Biden Audio, Say Tapes Confirm Mental Decline and Massive...
Minnesota Dems Fight to Keep Free Health Care for Illegal Immigrants Despite Soaring...
Piers Morgan Stumps Left-Wing Feminist on Defining a Woman
Trump Surges in Deep-Blue New Jersey as Voters Turn on Democrat Governor
Jasmine Crockett Mocks Christian Lawmakers Over SNAP Reform
This Pro-Life Advocate Once Underwent a Medication Abortion. Then She Reversed It.
Trump Torches Supreme Court Over Immigration Ruling: 'Criminals Will Flood In'
Pay for Pro Growth Tax Cuts by Ending the Credit Union Tax Loophole
Tipsheet

Federal Court Shuts Down Trump's Effort to Dismantle 'Voice of America'

AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein

The US District Court for the District of Columbia partially blocked the Trump administration’s effort to dismantle the US Agency for Global Media (USAGM) and its flagship entities like Voice of America (VOA).

Advertisement

The plaintiffs are several VOA employees, including White House Bureau Chief Patsy Widakuswara, Press Freedom Editor Jessica Jerreat, and several journalists. They argue that Trump’s effort to shut down the agency violates First Amendment rights, separation of powers, the Administrative Procedure Act (APA), and the International Broadcasting Act.

The court ruled that shutting down these agencies and placing employees on leave violated constitutional and legal protections. “The termination of contracts with partner organizations and the dismantling of critical infrastructure leading to the complete halt of the agency programming are final agency actions,” the court concluded.

Judge Royce C. Lamberth argued that the White House’s actions were rushed and lacking any serious planning. “Not only is there an absence of ‘reasoned analysis’ from the defendants; there is an absence of any analysis whatsoever,” he said. Agencies like VOA have a clear legal mandate from Congress, the judge noted. Including the requirement that the VOA “serve as a consistently reliable and authoritative source of news [that is] accurate, objective, and comprehensive.”

Advertisement

However, the administration acted too hastily, according to the judge who said “It is hard to fathom a more straightforward display of arbitrary and capricious actions than the Defendants’ actions here.”

The court rejected the White House’s argument that shutting down these agencies is an internal employment issue. The court insisted that this wasn’t just about layoffs—it was about the Trump administration trying to silence a critical piece of public media.

“It strains credulity to conclude the USAGM is ‘still standing’ when its 80-year-old flagship news service, VOA, has gone completely dark with no signs of returning,” the judge wrote.

The White House had argued that the shutdown was temporary. It needed to determine how to comply with President Donald Trump’s executive order. The judge didn’t buy it. “VOA is not reporting the news for the first time in its 80-year existence,” he countered.

The judge further argued that since these entities are funded by Congress, the executive branch can’t summarily cut off the funding spigot. “Certainly, disbursing congressional appropriations are statutorily required, and the agency axed them the very same day they were enacted,” he wrote, further noting that “The defendants had no method or approach towards shutting down USAGM that this Court can discern.”

Advertisement

President Trump issued the executive order in March to cut VOA’s operations and put its employees on paid administrative leave. The move was aimed at rooting out state-funded “radical propaganda” in the federal government.

White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt explained, “American taxpayers should not be funding anti-American propaganda in the name of journalism.”

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement