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FCC Chair Issues License Warning Over Iran War Coverage

Residents watch and take pictures as flames and smoke rise from an oil storage facility struck as attacks hit the city during the U.S.–Israeli military campaign in Tehran, Iran, Saturday, March 7, 2026. (Alireza Sotakbar/ISNA via AP)

On March 14, 2026, Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Chairman Brendan Carr issued a direct warning to American broadcasters, suggesting that their federal licenses could be at risk if they continue to air what he characterized as “hoaxes and news distortions” regarding the ongoing U.S.-Israeli war in Iran. The statement follows months of escalating tension between the Trump administration and legacy media outlets over the narrative of the conflict.

In this video, Chairman Carr discusses his views on media independence and his approval of recent management changes at major networks.  FCC Chairman Brendan Carr on Paramount and Media Trust.

The FCC Claim: “Public Interest” and News Distortion

Chairman Carr’s primary claim rests on the “public interest” mandate found in the Communications Act of 1934. Under this law, the FCC grants eight-year licenses to individual broadcast stations (the local affiliates of networks like ABC, CBS, and NBC) on the condition that they serve the public interest, convenience, and necessity.

Carr argues that “fake news”—specifically reporting that contradicts administration accounts of military operations—constitutes a failure to meet this legal standard. His specific warning on social media stated:

Faith Based Events

“Broadcasters that are running hoaxes and news distortions… have a chance now to correct course before their license renewals come up. The law is clear. Broadcasters must operate in the public interest, and they will lose their licenses if they do not.”

The catalyst for this specific warning was a dispute over military reporting. President Trump had earlier used Truth Social to lambaste reports concerning five U.S. tanker aircraft in Saudi Arabia. While media outlets reported damage to the fleet, the President claimed four were unharmed and accused the press of wanting the U.S. to “lose the War.” Carr echoed these sentiments, suggesting that trust in media has reached such a nadir that government intervention is necessary to “rectify” the information landscape.

The Legal Mechanism: The News Distortion Policy

The FCC maintains a long-standing “News Distortion Policy,” which prohibits the deliberate “slanting” or “staging” of news. To prove a violation, the FCC traditionally requires “extrinsic evidence” of intent, such as a directive from management to falsify facts.

However, Carr’s approach signals a broader interpretation. By linking license renewals to the “public interest” and accusing networks of “distorting” the reality of the war, the FCC chair is leveraging the agency’s role as a “spectrum tsar.” He has argued that because the public “subsidizes” broadcasters with free access to airwaves, the government has a right to ensure those airwaves are not used for “unpatriotic” or “misleading” coverage.

A History of “Drooping Eyebrow” Regulation

Historically, the FCC’s News Distortion Policy has been described by legal scholars as “regulation by drooping eyelid”—meaning the agency has historically avoided aggressive enforcement to stay clear of First Amendment violations.

Since its establishment in 1969, the policy has held a high evidentiary bar: the FCC generally requires evidence outside of the broadcast itself, such as internal memos or testimony of bribery, to prove “deliberate falsification.” In 1969’s Hunger in America case, the Commission famously stated it would “eschew the censor’s role.” Consequently, license revocations for news content are virtually non-existent in modern history. While the FCC revoked the license of WMJX in the 1970s for “willful distortion,” that case involved promotional hoaxes rather than political reporting.

Chairman Carr’s recent actions, however, mark a departure from this restraint. Since taking office in 2025, he has:

  • Reopened dismissed complaints against WCBS-TV regarding a 60 Minutes interview with Kamala Harris.
  • Threatened NBC’s licenses following a Saturday Night Live appearance by political opponents.
  • Pressured ABC to terminate Jimmy Kimmel Live! after critical segments concerning administration allies.

Constitutional and Political Backlash

The threats have sparked a firestorm of criticism from First Amendment advocates and political figures. California Governor Gavin Newsom labeled the move “flagrantly unconstitutional,” while Senator Brian Schatz described it as a “clear directive to provide positive war coverage.”

Legal experts note that while the Supreme Court’s 1943 NBC v. United States decision gave the FCC broad authority over “the composition of traffic” on the airwaves, modern jurisprudence has generally protected editorial independence. Critics argue that using the FCC to “bully” networks into favorable war coverage transforms a regulatory body into a tool for state-sponsored censorship.


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