WASHINGTON & SANTA FE, NM (By Catalina Camia, USA Today) March 17, 2011 — The House will vote on a bill today to eliminate taxpayer funds for NPR, a week after a fundraising executive was caught on video saying the organization would be better off without government support.
The legislation by
Rep. Doug Lamborn,
R-Colo., will likely
pass the GOP-led
House but face an
uphill battle in the
Democratic-controlled
Senate.
"We should stop
funding
organizations that
can stand on their
own feet," said
Lamborn, who has
pushed to defund NPR
long before the
scandal erupted over
the secretly taped
video.
Rep. Ed Markey,
D-Mass., chided
Republicans for
trying to deprive
Americans of popular
programs such as
Car Talk and
A Prairie Home
Companion,
which would do
little in the long
run to erase the
nation's red ink.
NPR reports that 2%
of its funding comes
from grants through
government agencies,
such as the
Department of
Education. The bulk
of NPR's revenue --
about 40% -- comes
from member stations
who pay fees for
programming.
Under Lamborn's
bill, local stations
would still be able
to use taxpayer
funding for
administrative
purposes.
NPR has been under
increased scrutiny
since a secretly
taped video was
released last week
in which
then-fundraiser Ron
Schiller is heard
slamming the Tea
Party movement and
making comments
about NPR's funding.
This morning,
leaders of a Tea
Party organization
said NPR should lose
its funding but
contend there is a
larger debate that
should occur.
"While the defunding
of NPR is a given at
this this
point...how long
will we as a nation
be willing to
tolerate the
arrogance of the
self-appointed
ruling elite," write
Mark Meckler and
Jenny Beth Martin,
co-founders of the
Tea Party Patriots,
in an op-ed for
The Hill.
Jon Garrido, owner and CEO of
Latino News, New
Mexico News, and Hispanic News, the number 1 ranked Hispanic site by Google stated, "The loss of funding for NPR will have no impact on
Hispanics given the fact the NPR website does not have one single article about
Hispanics. There are
articles about
minorities but only
blacks. Considering
Hispanics are the
largest minority
population in the
United States shows
NPR thinks the only
important minority
are blacks. This is
a slap to Hispanics.
Latino News, Hispanic News and New Mexico News supports cutting the deficit by eliminating funding for programs that are not inclusive,
bias and do not serve a national
agenda."