Trump has decided to freeze funding for VOA, Radio Free Asia, Radio Free Europe and other outlets in a move described as threatening to press freedom [Getty/file photo]
President Donald Trumpโs administration on Saturday put journalists at Voice of America and other US-funded broadcasters on leave, abruptly freezing decades-old outlets long seen as critical to countering Russian and Chinese information offensives.
Hundreds of staff at VOA, Radio Free Asia, Radio Free Europe and other outlets received a weekend email saying they will be barred from their offices and should surrender press passes and office-issued equipment.
Trump, who has already eviscerated the US global aid agency and the Education Department, on Friday issued an executive order listing the US Agency for Global Media as among โelements of the federal bureaucracy that the president has determined are unnecessary.โ
Kari Lake, a firebrand Trump supporter and former Arizona news anchor put in charge of the media agency after she lost a US Senate bid, said in an email to the outlets that federal grant money โno longer effectuates agency priorities.โ
White House press official Harrison Fields took a more casual tone, simply writing โgoodbyeโ on X in 20 languages, a jab at the outletsโ multilingual coverage.
VOA director Michael Abramowitz said he was among 1,300 staffers placed on leave Saturday.
โVOA needs thoughtful reform, and we have made progress in that regard. But todayโs action will leave Voice of America unable to carry out its vital mission,โ he said on Facebook.
โVoice of America has been a priceless asset for the United States, playing an essential role in the fight against communism, fascism, and oppression, and in the fight for freedom and democracy around the world,โ he said, noting that its coverage โ in 48 languages โ reaches 360 million people each week.
The head of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, which started broadcasting into the Soviet bloc during the Cold War, called the cancellation of funding โa massive gift to Americaโs enemies.โ
โThe Iranian ayatollahs, Chinese communist leaders, and autocrats in Moscow and Minsk would celebrate the demise of RFE/RL after 75 years,โ its president, Stephen Capus, said in a statement.
โNegates 80 yearsโ of US efforts
Advocacy group Reporters Without Borders condemned the decision, saying it โthreatens press freedom worldwide and negates 80 years of American history in supporting the free flow of information.โ
Gregory Meeks, the top Democrat on the House Foreign Affairs Committee, and senior Democratic congresswoman Lois Frankel said in a joint statement that Trumpโs move would โcause lasting damage to US efforts to counter propaganda around the world.โ
US-funded media have reoriented themselves since the end of the Cold War, dropping much of the programming geared toward newly democratic Central and Eastern European countries and focusing on Russia and China.
Chinese state-funded media have expanded their reach sharply over the past decade, including by offering free services to outlets in the developing world that would otherwise pay for Western news agencies.
Radio Free Asia, established in 1996, sees its mission as providing uncensored reporting into countries without free media including China, Myanmar, North Korea and Vietnam.
The outlets have an editorial firewall, with a stated guarantee of independence despite government funding.
The policy has angered some around Trump, who has long railed against media and suggested that government-funded outlets should promote his policies.
The move to end US-funded media is likely to meet challenges, much like Trumpโs other sweeping cuts. Congress, not the president, has the constitutional power of the purse and Radio Free Asia in particular has enjoyed bipartisan support in the past.
โConstant anxietyโ
One VOA employee described โconstant anxiety, looking at your phone at all hours, and checking X in your time offโ to learn the fate of the outlet.
The employee, who requested anonymity, described Saturdayโs message as another โperfect example of the chaos and unprepared nature of the process,โ with VOA staffers presuming that scheduled programming is off but not told so directly.
A Radio Free Asia employee said: โItโs not just about losing your income. We have staff and contractors who fear for their safety. We have reporters who work under the radar in authoritarian countries in Asia. We have staff in the US who fear deportation if their work visa is no longer valid.โ
โWiping us out with the strike of a pen is just terrible.โ