
Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin attacked ABC and NBC on Friday for declining to broadcast President Donald Trump’s speech on election security delivered Thursday evening. Mullin characterized the networks’ refusal as an attempt to prevent voters from accessing vital information ahead of midterm voting, questioning their editorial reasoning and suggesting they had something to conceal.
The networks took divergent approaches to Trump’s remarks. Fox News carried the speech in full, while CBS aired portions before halting transmission. CNN and MSNBC declined live coverage or limited their broadcasts, whereas ABC and NBC instead made the address available through digital streaming rather than traditional television outlets.
Mullin alleged a pattern of selective reporting by major networks, noting they had previously provided extensive coverage to statements affirming the security of the 2020 election. He argued that the same outlets demanding scrutiny of election vulnerabilities at one time were now avoiding similar coverage of Trump’s assertions.
During his Thursday address, Trump announced the declassification of intelligence documents detailing voting infrastructure weaknesses and foreign attempts to compromise voter registration systems. He called on Congress to pass the SAVE America Act, which would establish nationwide voter identification and citizenship verification requirements.
Trump himself condemned the broadcasters for refusing airtime on their primary channels, alleging they deliberately avoided coverage because they were aware of election system flaws. He contended that media organizations and other outlets were collaborating to withhold information that would benefit left-leaning political interests.
The president suggested the government should revoke broadcast licenses from networks unwilling to air his speeches, arguing that since these companies use publicly owned airwaves without direct payment, they should face regulatory consequences for their programming decisions. The FCC, which grants licenses to individual stations rather than nationwide networks, would be the applicable regulatory body for any such action based on editorial choices.
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