Appointment and early investigations As early as 2020, Carr was believed to be a possible successor to chairman
Ajit Pai. After
Donald Trump's victory in the
2024 U.S. presidential election, he was widely expected to be named as chair of the FCC. According to
The New York Times,
Elon Musk privately expressed support for Carr, with whom he had a good relationship. On November 17, 2024, Trump named Carr as his nominee for chair. Carr stated his intention to broaden the FCC's mandate to include social media companies. Carr became chairman after the
Trump's second inauguration on January 20, 2025, although he lacked a Republican majority, pending the confirmation of
Olivia Trusty. That month, Carr ordered an investigation into
NPR and
PBS sponsorships as a violation of commercial advertising regulations and stated that he did not believe
Congress should continue to fund both organizations. The following day, he requested a transcript of vice president
Kamala Harris's interview on
60 Minutes; the FCC released the transcript in February. That month, Carr reopened a complaint against
WPVI-TV that had been dismissed by
Jessica Rosenworcel, his predecessor as FCC chair, over ABC's moderation of the
September 2024 presidential debate between Trump and Harris. Carr also accused NBC of trying to "evade" the FCC's
equal-time rule when Harris appeared on the final
Saturday Night Live episode before the 2024 election. Carr heralded a shift in the FCC's purpose towards leveraging the
bully pulpit against opponents of
Trump's ideology. An ally of Musk, he awarded Musk's
SpaceX federal radio spectrum, and began an investigation into
EchoStar over 5G deployment requirements, threatening to give satellite spectrum to SpaceX instead; in response to the inquiry, EchoStar stopped paying interest payments. In April, Carr urged European countries to sign contracts with SpaceX over Chinese competitors. He eliminated a proposal that would have barred landlords from forcing bulk internet service on residents, and publicly questioned the
Global Positioning System, seeking alternatives. In March 2025, Carr announced an initiative titled "Delete, Delete, Delete" with the aim of eliminating existing telecom regulations. Carr utilized Direct Final Rule to remove regulations without the required full public comment period. In February, Carr ordered investigations into
diversity, equity, and inclusion practices at
Comcast, as well as into
KCBS over its coverage of immigration actions in
San Jose, California. Commissioner
Geoffrey Starks told
ABC News that Carr's investigations of corporate DEI policies exceeded the FCC's statutory authority. In apparent response to Carr,
Paramount Global, which had
a merger pending before the FCC, ended its DEI policies. In March, Carr told
Bloomberg News that he would block any mergers involving companies with DEI; the following week, he announced that he had opened an investigation into
The Walt Disney Company over its DEI policies, and also threatened to revoke ABC's broadcast license over the practices. Citing a complaint from
Great American Media, Carr sent a letter to
Google chief executive
Sundar Pichai and
YouTube executive
Neal Mohan asking if
YouTube TV was engaging in "faith-based discrimination". The following month,
T-Mobile closed its joint venture deal with
Lumos Networks after agreeing to end its DEI policies. The FCC approved
Verizon's acquisition of
Frontier Communications in May, assuring a commitment from Verizon that it would end its DEI practices.
Broadcasting rules and suspension of Jimmy Kimmel Live! The FCC returned to a quorum with Trusty's confirmation in June 2025, giving Republicans a majority. Carr moved to end
net neutrality, although a federal appellate court had already struck down net neutrality regulations, and refused to enforce a rule that would have lowered prison phone call prices; Trusty and Carr voted to decrease the limit in October, although their proposed limit was higher than what had been set the previous year. Carr has sought to broaden the FCC's mandate to adjudicate what content appears on television, particularly in countering a perceived liberal bias in broadcasts. The commission approved Paramount Global's merger with
Skydance Media in July, achieving a commitment from Skydance that the resulting company,
Paramount Skydance, would not have DEI policies. The commitment included installing an ombudsman to ensure a "diversity of viewpoints". Carr suggested in an interview with
CNBC that the cancellation of
The Late Show franchise by Paramount subsidiary
CBS helped the company comply with regulations. The
Freedom of the Press Foundation filed an ethics complaint against him that month, citing his statements and actions in the merger process of Skydance Media and Paramount Global. Following the approval, Carr stated that Skydance Media's promise to eliminate bias "made the difference" in securing the deal. In September 2025, Carr pressured
the Walt Disney Company, which owns the
American Broadcasting Company (ABC), over comments
Jimmy Kimmel made about the
assassination of Charlie Kirk, on his eponymous ABC show
Jimmy Kimmel Live! Carr encouraged local stations to preempt Kimmel's show, stating in comments made on the right-wing political commentator
Benny Johnson's podcast that the FCC "can do this the easy way or the hard way". Carr added that "companies can find ways to change conduct and take action, frankly, on Kimmel, or there's going to be additional work for the FCC ahead." Shortly afterwards,
Nexstar Media Group, the largest television station owner in the United States, stated that it would not air
Jimmy Kimmel Live! "for the foreseeable future". Nexstar was in the process of acquiring
Tegna, the fourth-largest broadcaster, a move necessitating FCC approval; the company later denied that Carr's comments influenced its decision. Hours later, ABC announced that it was pulling the show indefinitely. According to
The Wall Street Journal, the company's decision was made by
Bob Iger, the chief executive of Disney, and
Dana Walden, the co-chairman of
Disney Entertainment. House minority leader
Hakeem Jeffries, joined by House minority whip
Katherine Clark and
House Democratic Caucus chair
Pete Aguilar, denounced Carr's comments and called for him to resign. Senate minority leader
Chuck Schumer also called for Carr's resignation, and wrote a letter to Carr along with ten
Senate Democrats criticizing his comments and demanding answers to questions about their implications for broadcasters. Several Republican members of Congress criticized or expressed concern about Carr's comments, including
Kentucky senator
Rand Paul, as well as
Texas senator and
Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation chair
Ted Cruz, who compared Carr's statements to mafia tactics and called the threats "dangerous as hell". Conversely, Trump praised Carr as a "great American patriot" and his actions, citing purportedly overwhelmingly negative coverage of his presidency. Kimmel's show returned the following week.
Media influence campaign After the suspension of
Jimmy Kimmel Live!, Carr focused on applying the
equal-time rule. In September 2025, he identified the daytime talk show
The View as a possible target; in February 2026,
Reuters reported that Carr had initiated an investigation into
The View after it conducted an interview with
Texas state senator
James Talarico, a candidate in the
United States Senate election in Texas. In November 2025, Carr reposted from Trump calling on
NBC to fire the late-night host
Seth Meyers for his critical comedy of Trump. That month, he sent a letter to the chief executives of the
BBC,
PBS, and
NPR, requesting a comment on whether a speech made by Trump before the
January 6 Capitol attack was deceptively edited; the BBC had faced
accusations of systemic bias over coverage of the speech, leading to resignations. In January 2026, Carr a regulatory notice on the equal-time rule for television broadcasters about their morning and late-night talk shows. Commissioner
Anna Gomez criticized the guidance and claimed that it furthered Carr's "ongoing campaign to censor and control speech." That month, Carr reserved that the same regulatory guidance in the notice would not be applied to talk radio. In February, the comedian
Stephen Colbert accused
CBS's lawyers of blocking him from interviewing Talarico in fear that Carr would target the network; Carr dismissed the concern as a "hoax". Carr's efforts to enforce the
equal-time rule led to concerns from some media law experts and political operatives that Carr would stifle appearances from candidate in the
2026 elections. In March, Carr threatened to revoke the broadcasting licenses of television stations "running hoaxes and news distortions" relating to the
Iran war. He reposted a
Truth Social post from Trump that criticized the headline of an article in
The Wall Street Journal about
an Iranian airstrike as "intentionally misleading". That month, he voted to approve
a merger between
Nexstar Media Group and
Tegna. Carr sought public input on a proposed policy to apply television ratings to content containing transgender issues and initiated a review of Disney's broadcasting licenses; the review was related to diversity, equity, and inclusion policies at ABC News, though it was allegedly expedited by comments Kimmel made at the expense of Trump and his wife,
Melania. ==Views==