A long-running daytime staple is at the center of a growing clash between media companies and federal regulators, asThe Viewfaces renewed scrutiny from the Federal Communications Commission.
The dispute, which has drawn inDisneyexecutives, FCC officials, and political figures, centers on whether theABCtalk show should continue to qualify for a key exemption under federal “equal time” rules, which allow programs to host political candidates without necessarily giving the same airtime to their opponents.
What Triggered the Investigation
The latest controversy stems from an appearance by Texas state Rep.James Talarico, a Democrat running for U.S. Senate, onThe View. FCC ChairmanBrendan Carrhas questioned whether the show still qualifies as a “bona fide” news program, a designation that historically shields it from equal-time requirements.
If that classification were revoked, networks could be forced to offer comparable airtime to competing candidates, which could significantly alter how political guests are booked across television.
ABC has strongly pushed back, arguing that the FCC’s actions threaten decades of established precedent and could chill protected speech. In a recent filing, the network warned that the agency’s approach risks “viewpoint discrimination and retaliatory targeting,” particularly as scrutiny appears focused on programming critical of PresidentDonald Trump.
Disney, the FCC and a Broader Fight
The dispute has expanded beyond a single show. FCC CommissionerAnna Gomez, the agency’s lone Democrat, accused the Trump administration of using regulatory power to “punish and intimidate” ABC and parent company Disney, calling the investigation part of a broader effort to pressure media companies.
Gomez praised Disney forresisting that pressure, writing that the company is “choosing courage over capitulation” in the face of what she described as a “sustained, coordinated campaign of censorship and control.”
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The FCC has taken additional steps affecting ABC, including an acceleratedreview of its broadcast licenses, which the network says are unrelated to legitimate regulatory concerns and instead reflect political retaliation.
Why the Stakes Are High
“Under the ‘equal time’ rule, competing political candidates are entitled to equal access to the air,” saidDeanna Paul, a New York attorney and former journalist who is not involved in the case. “Shows likeThe Viewhave historically relied on FCC exemptions for news interviews. This allows networks to book politicians without automatically owing airtime to every opponent.”
Without those exemptions, there could very well be fewer political guests booked on TV and radio, not more.
“If regulators start reevaluating those exemptions, booking decisions become a legal risk calculation,” Paul explained. “The fear is that government pressure — even the threat of investigation or regulatory scrutiny — will prompt networks to self-censor and shape what’s said on air.”
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