ABC is responding to the FCCâs probe into The View and accusing the agency of potentially violating the First Amendment.
In a new petition, the network claimed recent actions from the Trump administrationâs regulatory agency âthreaten to upend decades of settled law and practice and chill critical protected speech,â following months of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) and Chairman Brendan Carrâs direct attacks against the long-running morning show.
The petition â filed on Thursday, May 7, and first covered by The New York Times â follows the FCC chairâs claim the the FCC had âraised serious questionsâ with The View. In February, Carr announced the agency was exploring âan enforcement actionâ against the show after it welcomed James Talarico, a Democratic candidate for Senate in Texas, as a guest. The series, which launched in 1997, was reportedly under investigation for potentially violating the FCCâs Equal Time Rule, a restriction that required broadcasters to provide commensurate airtime to opposing candidates, if requested.
Carr also wrote in a release shared to X in January that late night and daytime TV programs had an âobligation to provide all candidates with equal opportunitiesâ â despite a decision from the FCC in 2006 to exempt The Tonight Show and despite the fact that political candidates have appeared on similarly structured talk shows without equal airtime being provided for their opponents for decades.
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Per the petition, in March 2026, the FCC required ABCâs Houston affiliate, KTRK, to file a new request regarding if The View remains a âbona fide news interview programâ and qualifies for the exemption. ABC claimed that âit has never been disputed that The View qualifies as a bona fide news interview programâ and that, in 2002, ABC ârequested and obtained a Declaratory Ruling from the Mass Media Bureau confirming that status.â
âThe Commissionâs order to file this Petition for Declaratory Ruling is unprecedented, beyond the Commissionâs authority, and counterproductive to the Commissionâs stated goal of encouraging free speech and open political discussion,â ABC claimed. âThe Commissionâs actions threaten to upend decades of settled law and practice and chill critical protected speech, both with respect to âThe Viewâ and more broadly.â
Elsewhere in the petition, the network argued that while âsome may dislike certain â or even most â of the viewpoints expressed on The View or similar shows,â that âdislikeâ cannot âjustify using regulatory processes to restrict those views.â
It also shared that the FCC has not made similar claims to other media programs and that âsuch a clear disparity in the treatment of broadcasters that ought to be subject to the same treatment under law raises serious concerns about viewpoint discrimination and retaliatory targeting.â
In a Tuesday, April 28 interview on The Katie Miller Podcast, Carr explained that âbona fide news programsâ donât âhave to comply with equal time requirements.â He said âquestions have been raised about whether they are, in fact, bona fide news.â
Per Deadline, he also told reporters in February that his agency was âtaking a lookâ at the show regarding the Talarico interview. At the time, The View had no comment when PEOPLE reached out regarding the FCC chairmanâs comments.
A network source told PEOPLE in February that the panel show regularly hosts sitting leaders and political candidates from across the political spectrum to discuss current events, which is consistent with how The View has operated for years.
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The Late Show with Stephen Colbert also made headlines this year over an interview with Talarico. During the Feb. 16 episode of The Late Show, Colbert claimed that lawyers for CBS warned him he âcould notâ air an interview with Talarico, citing the FCCâs equal airtime rule.
Colbert had his interview uploaded to YouTube. Jimmy Kimmel told viewers the month prior that FCC was âcoming for us again,â referring to Jimmy Kimmel Live!, after the agencyâs public equal-airtime notice. He cited Jay Lenoâs 2006 interview with then-gubernatorial candidate in California, Arnold Schwarzenegger, and a ruling that followed where the FCC decided it was ânot subject to those equal-timeâ rules.
âThatâs how every talk show has operated since then, until this week,â Kimmel said.
âItâs a sneaky little way of keeping viewpoints that arenât his off air,â he alleged. âItâs his latest attack on free speech and itâs a joke because this isnât the â50s anymore. Back then there were only three major networks.â


