[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 108 (Wednesday, July 18, 2012)]
[House]
[Pages H4911-H4912]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
PUBLIC BROADCASTING
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Oregon (Mr. Blumenauer) for 5 minutes.
Mr. BLUMENAUER. There is a sad, unnecessary battle shaping up again
over the future of public broadcasting. It's not an exaggeration to say
that this battle is about the very future, the very existence of public
broadcasting. You might have thought that we were past this when, 15
months ago, the Republican House leadership targeted NPR and tried to
defund the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.
Luckily, last year, the 170 million people who don't just listen or
watch public broadcasting but depend upon it, unleashed an
unprecedented show of support. As a result, the Republican leadership
walked back. They cut, but did not kill, the Federal support for public
broadcasting despite the rhetoric. And there was actually a
constructive sign in last year's appropriations bill that requested a
study to examine alternatives to funding public broadcasting with
Federal funding so that people would have hard facts to operate on this
year.
Ironically, that study--requested by our Republican colleagues--now
being circulated, clearly shows that there is no viable alternative to
Federal funding for public broadcasting. Many of the proposals that
have been suggested would actually end up with less overall revenues in
the long term.
The House appropriations bill being marked up this morning would
slash funding now, defund NPR Federal support, and end public
broadcasting as we know it, within 2 years. At the same time, we have a
Republican Presidential nominee who singled out public broadcasting as
one of the five programs that he would eliminate.
This is because Governor Romney and the Republicans listen to a tiny
fraction of the American public that is even a minority in their own
party. A recent poll showed that two-thirds of the Republicans surveyed
would either keep Federal funding as it is, or increase it. What
resonates with Republican primary voters is not what America wants,
needs, or believes.
The unprecedented threat comes at exactly the time America needs
public broadcasting most. NPR News, the object of greatest Republican
scorn, is the most trusted brand in the American news media. Listeners
learn something, unlike Fox News viewers, who, surveys show, actually
know less about the facts than people who listen to no news at all.
NPR News has again the highest rating for the ninth year in a row.
PBS shows like ``Sesame Street'' have helped three generations of
parents raise their children with effective, commercial-free
educational programing.
Locally owned news is becoming only a memory for most of America as
larger corporations buy up radio and television stations and local
newspapers. There's no money to be made by commercial stations that
cater to the special needs of rural and small-town America. But public
broadcasting is there because their mission is to serve, not make
money. Often, these locally owned and managed public broadcasting
stations are the only source that is direct news, education, and
entertainment locally managed for local needs.
We must stop the attack on this critical service for rural and small-
town America. It's time for the 170 million Americans who depend on
public broadcasting every month to speak out again and for Congress to
finally listen.
The radical proposal to slash public broadcasting, defund NPR, and
terminate public broadcasting as we know it, is the most powerful
symbol of how out of step the Republican leadership is from the country
they are supposed to represent.
There's no reason to make public broadcasting a partisan issue. The
American public has broad support for it, Republicans, Independents and
Democrats alike, especially when PBS and its member stations were named
number one in public trust and an ``excellent'' use of taxpayer dollars
for the ninth consecutive year.
Since I've been in Congress, we've beaten back this destructive
effort, but our challenge now has never been more urgent. It's time for
people who believe in public broadcasting to stand up to what can only
be termed extremism and settle this question once and for
[[Page H4912]]
all about the future of public broadcasting. For unless we fight it
now, there may be nothing left to protect.
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