If the area is "blood red," what's the size of NCPR's audience? If it went off the air how many people would care? Maybe a conservative would buy it and make it more popular. That's how the free market should work.
You are so locked into your reference frame of who you think a public radio audience is that you've managed to completely miss every point I'm trying to get through to you.
Congratulations, I guess?
The facts on the ground are these: even an area that collectively votes "blood red" does so by relatively small margins. Stefanik's best showing was about 58 percent of the electorate.
And if you assume "red" voters aren't listening to public radio, that's just a bad assumption. NCPR draws about $1.5 million annually in listener and underwriter support, which is pretty phenomenal for a sprawling region with only about half a million people in it, all spread out in towns and villages and very small cities. There's no single community anywhere in NCPR's listening area with more than 30,000 people in it. Not one.
There's only one TV newsroom based anywhere in the region, WWNY in Watertown, and it only reaches about half of NCPR's territory. The rest is usually not covered at all by TV news from Burlington (across the lake in another state) or Albany.
It takes 33 transmitters to provide usable NCPR service to the entire region, including a lot of areas no commercial broadcaster even tries to serve. I would bet that just the cost of keeping those transmitters maintained and updated and connected and powered comes pretty close to the amount of listener funding NCPR draws, before you spend a penny on programming and studios and everything else a radio station needs to pay for.
You look at that from where you sit and apparently conclude "either the free market supports it or it may as well die."
I look at it from where I sit and conclude "we live in a country where remote areas like this deserve to be connected to the rest of the country in a meaningful way that can't always be supported by a purely commercial broadcasting system."
And NCPR is just one of hundreds of operations like this that survive on a shoestring. If you're going to kill them off - and THIS, more than anything, was the point of my editorial a week ago - there are budgetary processes and laws that are supposed to be followed to reach some kind of democratic consensus on how these decisions are to be made.
That, to me, is an extremely small-c "conservative" stand. And it's exactly the opposite of the mad rush of the last three weeks in Washington to undo decades of laws and traditions with no checks or balances in effect.
I fully expect that will lead to an attempt in the next few weeks to cut off CPB funding, and the point you're missing with your blinkered view of public radio audiences is that a move like that will disproportionately affect rural audiences in a way that isn't being considered by the defunders.