Why Is ‘Defund NPR’ Trending? Twitter Users Slam Hashtag For Misinformation About News Site
“Defund NPR” became a trending topic Sunday on Twitter as some users demanded taxpayer dollars no longer fund the outlet, while others pointed out that federal funding is non-existent.
National Public Radio, also known as NPR, is a non-profit media organization. The outlet receives a small portion of its funding from institutional grants, individual contributions, and fees paid by Public Radio Satellite System users. Combined, the funds make up 7% of the total revenue.
However, a large portion of the media organization’s revenue comes from corporate sponsors and fees paid by member stations.
Although grants from institutions and non-profits have allowed NPR to launch new programs and initiatives, expand coverage of major news topics, and more, defunding the small percentage of revenue wouldn’t necessarily stop the organization from running.
On Sunday, the topic caused division on Twitter as many defended NPR as a credible news organization that should be allowed to continue reporting the news.
“To the #DefundNPR idiots:2% of NPR’s revenue come from competitive grants. The rest is privately funded. How much of NPR’s revenue is directly funded by the federal government? 0%. Not a single dollar. Saying ‘Defund NPR!’ is like demanding that Chipotle stop serving pizza,” one user posted.
For those demanding that the government should defund NPR, you're got a problem.
— Dr. Joanne Freeman (@jbf1755) July 17, 2022
The government doesn't fund NPR.
So your tax dollars aren't paying for it.
(Less than 1% of NPR's funding comes from state and local funds -- for local stations.)https://t.co/2qvxo5wXYZ
Want to defund NPR or PBS? Don't donate, dummy.
— Mark Sherrick (@marksherrick) July 17, 2022
The people calling to defund NPR don't even know that it's not federally funded. They probably don't even know what "NPR" means...😂
— I Dissent. (@WillardoA54) July 17, 2022
Recognizing irony is not in their skill set. 😆
To the "Defund NPR" folk,
— Fr. Robert Ballecer, SJ (@padresj) July 17, 2022
I understand that you believe your tax dollars are being used for something that you don't like (NPR), but the truth is that WE (those who donate or sponsor, along w/"other revenue") provide ~99% of their funding.
So, in answer to your request:
"No" pic.twitter.com/sllfydt7Jh
When the far right says Defund NPR (which does NOT receive direct federal funding), they really mean censor NPR. Fascists only care about “free speech” when it benefits them.
— LeftOfTheDial (@EricShapiro3) July 17, 2022
The only people wanting to defund NPR have never listened to NPR in their lives.
— SchoolPsychGuy (@SchoolPsychGuy) July 17, 2022
Another user encouraged people to continue donating to NPR to maintain accurate news. “Defund NPR??? No Way! Truth must scare these Twitter trolls. Donate to your local NPR station. Public radio journalists in your community, across the country, and around the world bring you fact-based reporting,” the user posted.
While it is unclear exactly how the “Defund NPR” trend started, the phrase appeared to gain traction on Twitter after GOP members criticized the outlet over a disinformation reporting team.
On Saturday, North Carolina Rep. Dan Bishop tweeted “Defund NPR” and later retweeted messages suggesting the media organization reported disinformation as news.
The following day, Rep. Lauren Boebert, R-Colo., slammed NPR for creating the new team.
“NPR just announced the creation of a DISINFORMATION TEAM. NPR deliberately covered up the Hunter Biden laptop story by labeling it a DISTRACTION. NPR’s first target needs to be itself,” Boebert tweeted.
The NPR disinformation reporting team, which was announced on Friday, will be made up of Shannon Bond, Huo Jingnan, Lisa Hagen, and Brett Neely.

© Copyright IBTimes 2024. All rights reserved.