The people who voted for Trump didn't elect him because they wanted him to get rid of NPR and CPB. According to exit polling the main issues for voters were the democracy and the economy, followed by abortion and immigration. NPR, CPB funding wasn't on their radar screen. Maybe a couple thousand of the 73 million voters who voted for the orange man give two whits about NPR, public radio, or CPB funding. Probably most of the 73 million aren't aware of non-commercial radio funding, or how it operates. They're probably listening to your music stations instead.
Project 2025 has so much verbiage in it that domestic broadcasting amounts to 13 paragraphs, in just two and a half pages (pages 246-248) of the over 900 page document, where it deals with CPB, NPR, PBS, and NCE stations. The document calls for the President to use budgeting as a tool to cut the spending, claiming that the public radio stations already are 'commercial' because of underwriting (not true, of course, but rhetoric is rhetoric and it's sad when untrue rhetoric is guiding public policy).
From page 247: "The President can just tell Congress.... that he will not sign an appropriations bill that contains a penny for CPB..."
However, as BigA often points out, that has to pass muster in Congress, which actually does the spending. And that could be problematic, even in red states.
NBC News article on exit polling:
www.nbcnews.com
Here's all 922 pages of Project 2025:
Project 2025 has so much verbiage in it that domestic broadcasting amounts to 13 paragraphs, in just two and a half pages (pages 246-248) of the over 900 page document, where it deals with CPB, NPR, PBS, and NCE stations. The document calls for the President to use budgeting as a tool to cut the spending, claiming that the public radio stations already are 'commercial' because of underwriting (not true, of course, but rhetoric is rhetoric and it's sad when untrue rhetoric is guiding public policy).
From page 247: "The President can just tell Congress.... that he will not sign an appropriations bill that contains a penny for CPB..."
However, as BigA often points out, that has to pass muster in Congress, which actually does the spending. And that could be problematic, even in red states.
NBC News article on exit polling:
NBC News Exit Poll: Voters express deep concern about America's democracy and economy
Women are twice as likely as men to rank abortion as their top issue, according to preliminary results from the national survey.
Here's all 922 pages of Project 2025: