Political Hotsheet
By

Brian Montopoli /

CBS News/ October 22, 2010, 12:12 PM

Juan Williams Firing Prompts Jim DeMint Bill to Defund NPR

News analyst Juan Williams appears on the "Fox & friends" television program in New York, Thursday, Oct. 21, 2010. Williams, who has written extensively on race and civil rights in the U.S., has been fired by National Public Radio after comments he made about Muslims on Fox News Channel's "The O'Reilly Factor," on Monday.

/ Richard Drew

Updated 12:47 p.m. Eastern Time

Conservative Republican Senator Jim DeMint of South Carolina today announced plans to introduce legislation stripping federal funding from National Public Radio and the Public Broadcasting Service.

The move comes following the firing of NPR contributor Juan Williams for comments about Muslims. Williams said among other things that he gets "nervous" when he sees Muslims on his airplane flights.

The firing prompted calls from Sarah Palin, Mike Huckabee and others on the right to strip NPR of funding, and now DeMint, who is beloved in the Tea Party movement despite his Senate perch, has taken up the call.

"Once again we find the only free speech liberals support is the speech with which they agree. The incident with Mr. Williams shows that NPR is not concerned about providing the listening public with an honest debate of today's issues, but rather with promoting a one-sided liberal agenda," he said in a statement.

The release said U.S. Rep. Doug Lamborn, a California Republican, is putting forth legislation matching DeMint's in the House. He previously put forth such legislation in June. If Republicans take control of the House in the midterm elections they could bring the matter to a vote in the next Congress. (The same is true in the Senate, though a GOP takeover there is less likely.)

NPR and PBS get funding through the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, which got a $422 million total allocation from the federal government in FY2010. Much of that money goes to member stations, not NPR or PBS directly, though the member stations pay dues to NPR and PBS.

While NPR does not get any direct money from CPB, it does get grants as well as funding indirectly through member stations. Hotsheet dug into the numbers yesterday and calculated that between the two sources it gets less than ten percent of its budget from the federal government.

"Since 2001, the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, which funds programming for National Public Radio and the Public Broadcasting Service, has received nearly $4 billion in taxpayer money," DeMint said in his statement. "The country is over $13 trillion in debt and Congress must find ways to start trimming the federal budget to cut spending. NPR and PBS get about 15 percent of their total budget through federal funding, so these programs should be able to find a way to stand on their own. With record debt and unemployment, there's simply no reason to force taxpayers to subsidize a liberal programming they disagree with."

"We can't keep borrowing hundreds of millions of dollars from China each year to fund public radio and public TV when there are so many choices already in the market for news and entertainment. If CPB is defunded, taxpayers will save billions," he added. "This is just one of the many cuts Congress should make next year."

House Republican Whip Eric Cantor put out a separate statement today arguing that Williams' firing and the incident in which two of the hosts walked off the set of "The View" over comments by Bill O'Reilly reflects the fact that "over-reaching political correctness is chipping away at the fundamental American freedoms of speech and expression."

"NPR's decision to fire Juan Williams not only undermines that, it shows an ignorance of the fact that radical Islam and the terrorists who murder in its name scare people of all faiths, religions, and beliefs," Cantor added. He announcing in the release that he was adding the termination of federal funding for NPR as an option on the GOP's YouCut site, where people vote for what programs they want to see cut.


Brian Montopoli is a political reporter for CBSNews.com. You can read more of his posts here. Follow Hotsheet on Facebook and Twitter.
© 2010 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
13 Comments Add a Comment
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braniejackie says:
Right on NPR! As much as I like Williams, I am glad to see that there are still some news organizations with standards. This is not a matter of free speech, it is a matter of check and balances, ethics and corporate standards. Read more here http://wp.me/pNIW5-dD
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simpleconservative says:
NPR is the flagship of the ILLiberal left of today. Let's apply a "Fairness doctrine" to them. So sorry, they lose all funding and their license is cancelled, because they only tolerate one view. As Mr. Williams proves an opposing view in the slightest manner is not to be tolerated by NPR! On top of that the ILLiberal left that supports them also supports this view. Thanks Mr. Soros you can take over the funding of NPR now, just make sure they don't claim to be our nations voice in broadcasting!
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matthew2424 says:
acorn is still in business

acorn is still in business

where are u people getting your information
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matthew2424 says:
NNNNNPR

they know they were wrong for firing this man he spoke the truth. oh, so now only white people can say the truth or what they feel or think or know. who will they fire next.. who are they anyway demafu''a?
Hire the man back or you will loose all of your base funding
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MuthrBear says:
Although I would agree that, for the comment that was highlighted about 'Muslim garb', Williams should not have been fired, I would also agree with the analogy I read recently that suggested a bill to defund NPR over a personnel decision (good, bad, or indifferent) is a lot like asking for the death penalty in small claims court.

For people like DeMint who rail against ?government overreach?, they sure do have a knack for overreaching from their positions in government.
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edmundsingleton says:
Reducing or deleting public funding of NPR will send the wrong message that one 'can' alter public discussion...
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magicbeans2 says:
Do it! Defund NPR. I have know idea why we would be funding them anyhow.
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goemez says:
The above thought is smart and doesn?t require any further addition. It?s perfect thought from my side


<a href="http://www.femaledebt.com" rel="dofollow">Bankruptcy</a>>
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goemez replies:
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http://www.femaledebt.com
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stn_sage says:
Jim DeMint, in my opinion, is one of the nastiest and negative senators in the U.S. Senate! If he's not touring a war zone and trying to 'con' the public to come over to it as tourists, he's against anything useful to the average citizen, now, he's trying to defund NPR! I wish South Carolina would send someone to Congress who was a builder, instead of someone who is a destroyer!
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kindness99 says:
Senator DeMint strikes me as someone who acts like a child but occupies a position of authority. He has no honor or integrity. Integrity would require that he defended those he doesn't agree with who have had the same thing happen to them. Does he do that? No.

He's a infantile bully trying to be King of the Hill. What a feeble man.
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