Trump calls on FCC chair to impose ‘maximum fines and punishment’ on Paramount’s CBS over 60 Minutes
Donald Trump took issue with its 60 Minutes news program after it aired two segments regarding the war in Ukraine and his plan to annex Denmark’s autonomous territory of Greenland.

- President Donald Trump told FCC chair Brendan Carr that he should pull the broadcasting license and severely punish CBS for its reporting. In February, he signed an executive order granting him full authority over independent agencies including the FCC and the Federal Reserve previously overseen by Congress, including firing their respective heads.
President Trump is demanding federal regulators yank the broadcasting license for Paramount network CBS and levy the harshest possible fine for what he called “illegal” reporting on his administration.
The White House took issue with its 60 Minutes news program after it aired two segments on Sunday regarding the war in Ukraine and Trump’s plan to annex Denmark’s autonomous territory of Greenland.
He argued they depicted the country—and by extent his administration—“falsely, inaccurately and fraudulently,” though he did not explain what he meant, nor did he deny any specific part of the reporting.
It represents the latest intervention in a politically independent agency over which the president now aims to assert direct control.
“They should lose their license!” Trump posted to Truth Social. “Hopefully, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), as headed by its highly respected chairman, Brendan Carr, will impose the maximum fines and punishment, which is substantial, for their unlawful and illegal behavior.”
Trump claimed that almost every week, the Sunday news program engages in “derogatory and defamatory” reporting, but this 60 Minutes was worse because it involved not one but two reports covering issues related to the president’s agenda. He called the program a “dishonest political operative.”
Trump moves to assert full control over independent agencies
In theory, Carr could conceivably refuse Trump’s demand or only follow through partly, since the FCC has thus far operated as an independent federal agency under the oversight of Congress, similar to the Federal Reserve.
In practice, defying it outright would prove difficult, however, as the legislature has deferred to the White House following Trump’s convincing November election victory.
With little to no restraints on his administration, Trump has already signed far more executive orders than any other president in history.
One of those, Executive Order 14215, explicitly seeks to strip the independence of federal agencies and place all regulators, including Carr, under the direct authority of the White House.
Fears are growing Trump will sack Fed chair Powell
This would enable Trump to fire commissioners like the FCC chair as he sees fit—"at will” rather than “for cause”.
Indeed, Trump has already removed, among others, the two legally mandated Democrats that jointly run the Federal Trade Commission together with three Republicans.
That decision is now being contested in court under the landmark 1935 Humphrey’s Executor v. United States ruling, which protects senior civil servants against wrongful termination.
With Trump now attempting to politicize the duties of independent federal regulators, fears are growing that he will sack Fed chair Jay Powell should the Supreme Court not uphold the longstanding precedent.
Neither the FCC nor CBS responded to a Fortune request for comment by press time.
Trump is already suing Paramount and CBS for election interference, initially for $10 billion in purported damages before doubling that to $20 billion in February as part of an amended lawsuit.
This story was originally featured on Fortune.com