Over the course of NPR's history, controversies have arisen over a number of issues and incidents.
Allegations of political or ideological bias NPR station
WNYC in New York City delved into the question of purported liberal bias on its
On the Media program in March 2011. The program invited four conservative listeners to participate in the discussion, and highlighted two studies that assessed the issue of bias in the news media, with differing results. One study (by professors at
UCLA and the
University of Missouri), which was based on the number of liberal or conservative
think-tanks that were cited by a range of news outlets, found that NPR's
Morning Edition was somewhat liberal. The other study, by
Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting, counted the number of Republicans and Democrats who were heard on
Morning Edition and
All Things Considered, and found "a very strong slant in favor of the GOP." The NPR ombudsman has described how NPR's coverage of the
Israel-Palestinian conflict has been simultaneously criticized as biased by both sides. University of Texas journalism professor and author
Robert Jensen has criticized NPR as taking a pro-war stance during coverage of
Iraq war protests. During the 2020 election, NPR declined to cover the controversy surrounding a
New York Post article on the
Hunter Biden laptop controversy, saying "...we don't want to waste the listeners' and readers' time on stories that are just pure distractions..." In 2024, veteran NPR journalist
Uri Berliner stated that NPR demonstrated a left-wing bias in its reporting after the
2016 United States presidential election, citing NPR's approach to coverage of the Hunter Biden laptop controversy, the
Mueller special counsel investigation, the
origin of SARS-CoV-2, and the
Gaza war. According to Berliner, NPR's management prioritized focus on race and identity politics, while NPR simultaneously lost viewpoint diversity. NPR editor-in-chief
Edith Chapin claimed that NPR stood behind its work and defended its policies on inclusion. NPR subsequently suspended Berliner for 5 days without pay, claiming that he did not secure NPR approval to work for another outlet. Berliner subsequently resigned, citing disparagement by CEO Katherine Maher and her divisive views.
Euphemisms for "torture" In a controversial act, in 2009 NPR banned the use of the word "
torture" in regard to the
George W. Bush administration's employment of so-called "
enhanced interrogation techniques". NPR Ombudswoman
Alicia Shepard's defense of the policy was that "calling
waterboarding torture is tantamount to taking sides."
UC Berkeley Professor of Linguistics
Geoffrey Nunberg pointed out that virtually all media around the world, other than what he called the "spineless U.S. media", call these techniques torture. In an article which criticized NPR and other U.S. media for their use of euphemisms for torture, independent journalist
Glenn Greenwald discussed what he called the enabling "corruption of American journalism": This active media complicity in concealing that our Government created a systematic torture regime, by refusing ever to say so, is one of the principal reasons it was allowed to happen for so long. The steadfast, ongoing refusal of our leading media institutions to refer to what the Bush administration did as "torture" – even in the face of more than 100 detainee deaths; the use of that term by a leading Bush official to describe what was done at Guantanamo; and the fact that media outlets frequently use the word "torture" to describe exactly the same methods when used by other countries – reveals much about how the modern journalist thinks.
Live from Death Row commentaries In 1994, NPR arranged to air, on
All Things Considered, a series of three-minute commentaries by
Mumia Abu-Jamal, a journalist convicted of murdering
Philadelphia Police officer Daniel Faulkner. They cancelled the commentaries after the
Fraternal Order of Police and members of the U.S. Congress objected.
Juan Williams comments On October 20, 2010, NPR terminated Senior News Analyst
Juan Williams's independent contract over a series of incidents culminating in remarks he made on the
Fox News Channel regarding Muslim head coverings and not feeling comfortable around women wearing them. Williams's firing, which was made abruptly without Williams being given a face-to-face meeting beforehand, was reported by
The Washington Post as being a key part of
Ellen Weiss, NPR's top news executive at the time, being given an ultimatum on January 4, 2011, to either resign or be fired. On January 6, 2011, NPR announced that Weiss had quit.
Ronald Schiller comments In March 2011, conservative political activist and provocateur
James O'Keefe sent partners Simon Templar (a pen name) and Shaughn Adeleye to secretly record their discussion with Ronald Schiller, NPR's outgoing senior vice president for
fundraising, and an associate, in which Schiller made remarks viewed as disparaging of "the current Republican party, especially the
Tea Party", and controversial comments regarding Palestine and funding for NPR. NPR disavowed Schiller's comments. CEO Vivian Schiller, who is not related to Ronald, later resigned over the fallout from the comments and the previous firing of Juan Williams.
July 4 reading of the Declaration of Independence From 1988 to 2021, NPR broadcast an annual reading of the 1776
United States Declaration of Independence over the radio. In 2017, it began using Twitter as a medium for reading the document as well. On July 4, 2017, the 100+ tweets were met with considerable opposition, as some online supporters of
Donald Trump mistakenly believed the words of the Declaration referring to
George III of the United Kingdom were being directed towards the president. The tweets were called "trash" condoning violence and calling for revolution. The July 4, 2022, annual tradition was not held. Instead, referencing the recent
Dobbs decision and
voting rights, host
Steve Inskeep held a discussion on "what equality means" with two historians, contrasting Thomas Jefferson's use of "
All men are created equal" in the Declaration with
his participation in slavery. where eight women filed sexual harassment complaints against Oreskes. After a report on the
Times accusations was published in
The Washington Post, NPR put Oreskes on administrative leave, and the following day his resignation was requested. CNN's
Brian Stelter reported that NPR staffers were dissatisfied with the handling of Oreskes, were demanding an external investigation, and that Oreskes poisoned the newsroom atmosphere by abusing his position to meet young women. Oreskes resigned at the request of CEO
Jarl Mohn, was denied severance and separation benefits, and reimbursed NPR $1,800 in expense account charges related to his meetings with women.
Elon Musk / Twitter controversy On April 5, 2023, following
Elon Musk's acquisition of the American social media platform Twitter, NPR's main Twitter account was designated as "US state-affiliated media". This label was typically reserved for foreign media outlets that directly represented the point of view of their respective governments, like Russia's
RT and China's
Xinhua. Twitter's designation was widely considered controversial as NPR is an independent news organization that receives only a tiny fraction of its funding from the government. Twitter's previous policy had explicitly mentioned NPR, as well as the United Kingdom's
BBC, as examples of networks that were not considered as state-affiliated due to their editorial independence. On April 8, 2023, Twitter changed the designation of NPR's account from "state-affiliated" to "government-funded". On April 10, after managing to get in contact with Musk himself, NPR reporter Bobby Allyn wrote in a tweet that the platform's owner told him he was relying on a list accessible through a Wikipedia category page, named "
:Category:Publicly funded broadcasters", to determine which news organizations' accounts should be deemed as "government-funded media". On April 12, NPR announced that its accounts would no longer be active on Twitter, citing the platform's "inaccurate and misleading" labeling of NPR as "government-funded media" despite the fact that it receives "less than 1 percent of its $300 million annual budget" from the
Corporation for Public Broadcasting. In its last post on the platform, the network shared links to its alternative newsletters, websites and social media profiles in a thread. In an email to the staff explaining the decision, CEO John Lansing allowed individual NPR journalists and staffers to choose for themselves whether to keep using Twitter, while noting that "it would be a disservice to the serious work you all do here to continue to share it on a platform that is associating the federal charter for public media with an abandoning of editorial independence or standards."
Second Trump administration FCC underwriting investigation Executive Order 14290 Rescissions Act of 2025 The
Rescissions Act of 2025 altered the financial outlook for the
Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB) by reclaiming unspent allocations and reducing advance funding. While NPR receives limited direct support from the CPB, the legislation sparked concern for local member stations. Rural broadcasters are particularly vulnerable because they depend on CPB grants for a larger share of their operating budgets than urban stations. ==Publications==