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OAN's Pentagon reporter learns the limits of expressing her own opinion
OAN's Pentagon reporter learns the limits of expressing her own opinion

Washington Post

time3 days ago

  • General
  • Washington Post

OAN's Pentagon reporter learns the limits of expressing her own opinion

Assigned to cover the Pentagon for the conservative outlet One America News Network, Gabrielle Cuccia didn't pretend to be an unbiased reporter. She describes herself as 'a MAGA girl' who is unapologetically defiant in her support of President Donald Trump. Yet days after publicly criticizing a Trump appointee, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth , Cuccia found herself out of a job. In taking to Substack last week to express a personal opinion about a figure she covers, Cuccia did something that would be frowned upon in many legacy newsrooms. The message that she was sent, however, is most likely to resound in places where opinion is fine — but only a certain variety. Cuccia's lengthy Substack post , 'The Secretary of Defense-ive,' was posted three days after Hegseth issued new rules that banned reporters from accessing large areas of the Pentagon without being watched by his minders. She criticized him for limiting freedom of movement in the name of national security. 'The Pentagon wants to paint a picture that journalists are freely roaming classified spaces, sneaking into (secure areas), and leaking top-secret information,' she wrote. 'And that is simply not true. There are security cameras everywhere, protocols in place and quite frankly, it would be painfully obvious if a reporter was in a space they didn't belong.' Cuccia said the real leaks from the Pentagon have come from Hegseth's own team and other senior officials. Hegseth, a former Fox News personality, was embarrassed in March when The Atlantic magazine's editor-in-chief was mistakenly included in a Signal chat in which the defense secretary discussed upcoming military strikes. She criticized Hegseth for not yet holding a media briefing at the Pentagon. 'The Commander-in-Chief welcomes the hard questions ... and yes, even the dumb ones,' she wrote. 'Why won't the Secretary of Defense do the same?' Three days after her Memorial Day Substack post, Cuccia said her Pentagon access badge was revoked. 'By Friday,' she said, 'I was out of a job.' The Defense Department did not pull Cuccia's credentials, according to a Defense official who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss personnel issues. Cuccia said OAN told her the Substack piece had been 'put on their radar,' but she wouldn't say by who. She wouldn't speak further about what her employer told her, and OAN president Charles Herring told The Associated Press that it does not discuss personnel issues. 'When a reporter asks inconvenient questions about government overreach, the response should be accountability — not silence, and certainly not separation,' Cuccia said. Traditionally, the legacy media does not want its journalists expressing opinions about people they cover, since it calls into doubt their ability to report without bias. But exceptions are often made in cases where media access is at issue, said Tom Rosenstiel, a journalism professor at the University of Maryland. The New York Times, for example, institutionally called upon Joe Biden to meet more often with journalists when he was president. The Pentagon Press Association said Hegseth's restrictions were a direct assault on the freedom of the press. One America News Network makes no secret of its allegiance to Trump. When Matt Gaetz's nomination as Trump's attorney general fell apart following the election, OAN quickly signed him up as a contributor. OAN faced lawsuits — and negotiated settlements — for its promotion of Trump's false theories that he did not lose the 2020 election. When Hegseth earlier this year evicted several news organizations from their Pentagon workspaces and gave more room to friendly outlets, Cuccia was assigned space formerly held by NBC News. Before Hegseth aide Sean Parnell's only media briefing, Cuccia said Hegseth's team reached out to her in advance to find out what questions she wanted to ask, something that would never be done for most media outlets. If OAN is responsible for removing Cuccia, it's a 'take no quarter position,' Rosenstiel said. 'There is no room, if you're on the team, to say anything that is negative.' He said he'd be interested to see if any representatives from pro-Trump media outlets defend her. 'Are they silent, or do they rally to her in any way?' he asked. Trump, in the past, has frequently criticized Fox News Channel for saying anything on the air that he deemed negative. Part of Cuccia's Substack post sounded almost prescient about what might happen to her, when she reminisced about the energy of the early Make America Great Again movement. Questioning government then, she noted, was a point of pride. 'Somewhere along the way, we as a collective decided — if anyone ever questioned a policy or person within the MAGA movement — that they weren't MAGA enough,' she wrote. 'That they were deep state, that they couldn't be trusted, that they didn't love America as much as we do and that ... to put it bluntly, they sucked.' ___ AP correspondent Lolita C. Baldor in Washington contributed to this report. David Bauder writes about the intersection of media and entertainment for the AP. Follow him at and

OAN's Pentagon reporter learns the limits of expressing her own opinion
OAN's Pentagon reporter learns the limits of expressing her own opinion

Associated Press

time3 days ago

  • General
  • Associated Press

OAN's Pentagon reporter learns the limits of expressing her own opinion

Assigned to cover the Pentagon for the conservative outlet One America News Network, Gabrielle Cuccia didn't pretend to be an unbiased reporter. She describes herself as 'a MAGA girl' who is unapologetically defiant in her support of President Donald Trump. Yet days after publicly criticizing a Trump appointee, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, Cuccia found herself out of a job. In taking to Substack last week to express a personal opinion about a figure she covers, Cuccia did something that would be frowned upon in many legacy newsrooms. The message that she was sent, however, is most likely to resound in places where opinion is fine — but only a certain variety. Cuccia's lengthy Substack post, 'The Secretary of Defense-ive,' was posted three days after Hegseth issued new rules that banned reporters from accessing large areas of the Pentagon without being watched by his minders. She criticized him for limiting freedom of movement in the name of national security. Cuccia praises responsible Pentagon reporters 'The Pentagon wants to paint a picture that journalists are freely roaming classified spaces, sneaking into (secure areas), and leaking top-secret information,' she wrote. 'And that is simply not true. There are security cameras everywhere, protocols in place and quite frankly, it would be painfully obvious if a reporter was in a space they didn't belong.' Cuccia said the real leaks from the Pentagon have come from Hegseth's own team and other senior officials. Hegseth, a former Fox News personality, was embarrassed in March when The Atlantic magazine's editor-in-chief was mistakenly included in a Signal chat in which the defense secretary discussed upcoming military strikes. She criticized Hegseth for not yet holding a media briefing at the Pentagon. 'The Commander-in-Chief welcomes the hard questions ... and yes, even the dumb ones,' she wrote. 'Why won't the Secretary of Defense do the same?' Three days after her Memorial Day Substack post, Cuccia said her Pentagon access badge was revoked. 'By Friday,' she said, 'I was out of a job.' The Defense Department did not pull Cuccia's credentials, according to a Defense official who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss personnel issues. Cuccia said OAN told her the Substack piece had been 'put on their radar,' but she wouldn't say by who. She wouldn't speak further about what her employer told her, and OAN president Charles Herring told The Associated Press that it does not discuss personnel issues. 'When a reporter asks inconvenient questions about government overreach, the response should be accountability — not silence, and certainly not separation,' Cuccia said. Traditionally, the legacy media does not want its journalists expressing opinions about people they cover, since it calls into doubt their ability to report without bias. But exceptions are often made in cases where media access is at issue, said Tom Rosenstiel, a journalism professor at the University of Maryland. The New York Times, for example, institutionally called upon Joe Biden to meet more often with journalists when he was president. The Pentagon Press Association said Hegseth's restrictions were a direct assault on the freedom of the press. Making no secret of allegiance to Trump One America News Network makes no secret of its allegiance to Trump. When Matt Gaetz's nomination as Trump's attorney general fell apart following the election, OAN quickly signed him up as a contributor. OAN faced lawsuits — and negotiated settlements — for its promotion of Trump's false theories that he did not lose the 2020 election. When Hegseth earlier this year evicted several news organizations from their Pentagon workspaces and gave more room to friendly outlets, Cuccia was assigned space formerly held by NBC News. Before Hegseth aide Sean Parnell's only media briefing, Cuccia said Hegseth's team reached out to her in advance to find out what questions she wanted to ask, something that would never be done for most media outlets. If OAN is responsible for removing Cuccia, it's a 'take no quarter position,' Rosenstiel said. 'There is no room, if you're on the team, to say anything that is negative.' He said he'd be interested to see if any representatives from pro-Trump media outlets defend her. 'Are they silent, or do they rally to her in any way?' he asked. Trump, in the past, has frequently criticized Fox News Channel for saying anything on the air that he deemed negative. Part of Cuccia's Substack post sounded almost prescient about what might happen to her, when she reminisced about the energy of the early Make America Great Again movement. Questioning government then, she noted, was a point of pride. 'Somewhere along the way, we as a collective decided — if anyone ever questioned a policy or person within the MAGA movement — that they weren't MAGA enough,' she wrote. 'That they were deep state, that they couldn't be trusted, that they didn't love America as much as we do and that ... to put it bluntly, they sucked.' ___ AP correspondent Lolita C. Baldor in Washington contributed to this report. David Bauder writes about the intersection of media and entertainment for the AP. Follow him at and

Pro-MAGA reporter fired after questioning why Pete Hegseth hides from the media
Pro-MAGA reporter fired after questioning why Pete Hegseth hides from the media

The Independent

time3 days ago

  • Business
  • The Independent

Pro-MAGA reporter fired after questioning why Pete Hegseth hides from the media

Gabrielle Cuccia, a self-described 'MAGA girl' who served as One America News' chief Pentagon correspondent, says the far-right network fired her after she criticized Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth's war against the free press. In a blistering Substack post on Tuesday, Cuccia – who served in the first Trump administration – tore into the Pentagon for limiting media access and blasted Hegseth for not holding one press briefing since taking over as the head of the Defense Department. Specifically, she took issue with the agency closing off portions of the Pentagon that had previously always been open to reporters. 'He claims it's to 'reduce the opportunity for in-person inadvertent or unauthorized disclosures.' But let's be honest — since January, the real leaks from the Pentagon haven't come from the press. They've come from Hegseth's own team and other senior officials,' she wrote. 'I personally know reporters who've sent formal emails to Hegseth's office requesting clarification on specific topics — and received radio silence in return,' Cuccia added. 'Let's call this what it is: limiting freedom of movement in the name of 'national security.'' Making sure to burnish her pro-Trump bona fides, Cuccia noted that it is 'pretty obvious how I feel about fake news outlets like CNN, MSNBC, CBS, and ABC,' adding that she thinks 'their obsession with advocating for transgender inclusion in the military is a complete waste of time and taxpayer resources.' At the same time, though, she noted that while their 'coverage may not be my cup of tea,' it 'doesn't mean I stand behind Hegseth's decision' to limit reporters' movements through the Pentagon. 'It also raises a fair question: why has the Department prioritized limiting press access, while the Secretary of Defense himself has yet to hold a briefing in the press room during his first 100 days?' Cuccia also asked. Two days after she published her fateful Substack post, Cuccia told CNN that her bureau chief asked her to turn in her Pentagon badge. The following days, she said, she was fitted by the network. Asked to comment on the circumstances surrounding Cuccia's termination, OAN president Charles Herring told The Independent that 'we don't comment on employee related issues.' 'On Thursday, my Pentagon badge was revoked. By Friday, I was out of a job,' Cuccia told The Independent. 'The timing came just days after I published a personal Substack article raising legitimate concerns about new restrictions placed on journalists inside the Pentagon — an article my employer later confirmed had been 'put on their radar.'' She continued: 'When a reporter asks inconvenient questions about government overreach, the response should be accountability — not silence, and certainly not separation. You can love your country and still challenge those who govern it. I've never been afraid to speak the truth, even when it costs me. My loyalty is — and always will be — to my country above all else. And for those reasons, this isn't the end.' The Independent also asked Cuccia if she was aware if OAN had tapped anyone else to replace her yet as the network's top Pentagon reporter. 'I can confirm I have been contacted by potential new hires to fill my role asking how to do the job, what are the expectations, what qualifies as conflicts of interest within the role, and what my experience was like with OAN,' she said. 'I was told that OAN is seeking to fill this role as soon as today, Monday, June 2nd.' Cuccia, who had briefly worked for OAN as a White House correspondent towards the end of the first Trump administration, was re-hired by OAN in February to lead its defense coverage after Hegseth took away NBC's longtime workspace and handed it to the MAGA channel. This was, of course, part of the administration's larger effort to push out mainstream media outlets and elevate sympathetic right-wing coverage. Initially elated with the opportunity, Cuccia would take to her social media accounts to document how she personally renovated the old NBC office into what she deemed 'Liberty Lounge.' Still, her joy soon grew into skepticism and disillusionment over the way Hegseth handled the Signalgate scandal. 'Our SecDef told us that it was Fake News. That it was another Russia Hoax,' she noted. 'As a MAGA girl myself, I cannot stand when we take something super serious and legitimate - such as the Russia Hoax - and conflate everything and anything that is an inconvenient truth, throw in the towel and say, 'Yep its just a Russia Hoax,' and then proceed to call people losers and liars for reporting something that was unfortunately… true.' Cuccia insisted that following Signalgate, 'the Pentagon stopped all press briefings moving forward and simultaneously decided to lock one of the doors that connects journalists to the DoD's Public Affairs Officials, a door that has always been wide open.' She also took Hegseth to task for the 'cheap PR move' of using the Memorial Day weekend to 'conveniently' announce that reporters are no longer allowed access to the offices of the Secretary of Defense or the Joint Chiefs without an official escort. 'This Administration, to my surprise, also locked the doors to the Pentagon Briefing room, a protocol that was never in place in prior Administrations, and a door that is never locked for press at the White House,' she wrote. 'The Commander-in-Chief welcomes the hard questions… and yes, even the dumb ones. Why won't the Secretary of Defense do the same?' Cuccia rhetorically asked. Since telling CNN on Friday that she was fired by OAN, Cuccia has since changed her X profile to read 'Fmr Chief Pentagon Correspondent' and posted a story on her Instagram that included a screenshot of her Substack article. 'You know… I was once told that a former peer feared I was too MAGA for this job,' she captioned the story. 'I guess I was. I guess I am.' Throughout her Substack post, she asserted that her intention in sounding off against the DoD press policy was to 'tear down' Hegseth, but due to her 'wanting to keep MAGA alive.' She also repeatedly used the phrase 'love your country, not your government,' which is a slogan she's emblazoned on tank tops that she began selling on Etsy last year. Prior to returning to OAN this year, Cuccia had drawn attention to herself by posing with firearms on her social media accounts, hawking her MAGA-branded merchandise, and once causing a Newsmax host to cut off her mic after she began peddling Trump's baseless 2020 election fraud claims on the air. Newsmax, like One America News, has been sued multiple times for defamation for amplifying election denialism and voting machine conspiracy theories. If she was indeed fired for criticizing Hegseth and the administration, this wouldn't be the first time that OAN has terminated an employee for speaking out publicly. Back in 2021, the right-wing cable channel fired producer Marty Golingan after he told the New York Times on the record that many network staffers don't think many of OAN stories are factual. One America News, which had been facing an existential crisis after losing nearly all of its cable and satellite contracts in recent years over its conspiratorial coverage, appears to be on the upswing since Trump's return to the White House. Besides taking over NBC's office space in the Pentagon, the network hired former GOP congressman (and one-time attorney general nominee) Matt Gaetz as a primetime host, and White House senior adviser Kari Lake announced last month that she struck a deal with the channel to blast out its content on Voice of America's airwaves. Cuccia isn't the only conservative media figure who has scrutinized the Pentagon press crackdown. After CNN first reported on her firing, Fox News media host Howie Kurtz highlighted the criticism over Hegseth's actions against the media and brought on former CNN Pentagon correspondent Barbara Starr to blast the defense secretary (and former Fox News host) for restricting press access.

MAGA Reporter Fired for ‘Telling Truth' About Pete Hegseth
MAGA Reporter Fired for ‘Telling Truth' About Pete Hegseth

Yahoo

time5 days ago

  • Business
  • Yahoo

MAGA Reporter Fired for ‘Telling Truth' About Pete Hegseth

A proud MAGA reporter says she was fired after she dared to criticize Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth. Gabrielle Cuccia, the chief Pentagon correspondent for the far-right network One America News (OAN), was axed after she wrote a scathing Substack post tearing into the Pentagon for limiting journalists' access. 'The Commander-in-Chief welcomes the hard questions… and yes, even the dumb ones,' Cuccia wrote. 'Why won't the Secretary of Defense do the same?' The article was headlined 'The Secretary of Defense-sive.' Cuccia, 30, said that the Pentagon began to shut out reporters in March after Signalgate, the headline-grabbing scandal that saw Hegseth accidentally reveal details of a military operation in a group chat with a prominent journalist. 'The Pentagon stopped all press briefings moving forward and simultaneously decided to lock one of the doors that connects journalists to the DoD's Public Affairs Officials, a door that has always been wide open,' Cuccia wrote. She observed that the Pentagon has only held one press briefing during Hegseth's tenure—and none since the scandal. Cuccia said that the breaking point was a new Pentagon policy, announced last week, that reporters could only access Hegseth's office if accompanied by public affairs staff. She disclosed the official explanation for the change, noting that it would 'reduce the opportunity for in-person inadvertent or unauthorized disclosures.' 'But let's be honest—since January, the real leaks from the Pentagon haven't come from the press. They've come from Hegseth's own team and other senior officials,' she wrote. In April, Hegseth fired three top aides whom he claimed had spilled information to the media. Leaks have seemed to weigh heavily on the secretary's mind—so much so that he has threatened to have his colleagues submit to polygraphs. One of the aides who was ousted, Colin Carroll, said that Hegseth would spend '50 percent' of his time investigating leaks. As she offered the criticism, Cuccia repeatedly pointed to her impeccable MAGA credentials. As an undergraduate at the University of Pennsylvania—the president's alma mater—she faced being called 'a racist, a fascist, a bigot' because she refused to march in Black Lives Matter protests, she wrote. Later, she landed an administrative role in Trump's first White House administration. 'Some call it loyalty. I call it conviction,' she said. But she nevertheless declared the Pentagon situation emblematic of 'the death of the MAGA movement.' 'Somewhere along the way, we as a collective decided—if anyone ever questioned a policy or person within the MAGA movement—that they weren't MAGA enough," Cuccia wrote. Her intention, she emphasized, was not to 'tear down' Trump's defense secretary. 'This is me wanting to keep MAGA alive,' she wrote, urging the movement's members to 'love your country, not your government.' It didn't matter. Cuccia published the post on Monday. On Thursday, she was asked to turn her Pentagon badge in to her boss, she told CNN. And on Friday, she was fired. The Daily Beast has reached out to Cuccia via her social media. The Pentagon and OAN did not return requests for comment. Previously a White House correspondent for OAN, Cuccia took on the Pentagon role in February after Trump's administration gave OAN a coveted press corps workspace spot, demoting NBC News. The move was part of a broader push to bring more pro-Trump outlets into the fold. Since her firing, Cuccia has continued to stand by her words. On Saturday, she posted the Substack post to her Instagram. 'I was once told that a former peer feared I was too MAGA for the job,' she wrote alongside it. 'I guess I was. I guess I am.'

Journalists fight Trump 'attacks' on media as Beijing ramps up state-run radio
Journalists fight Trump 'attacks' on media as Beijing ramps up state-run radio

ABC News

time27-05-2025

  • Politics
  • ABC News

Journalists fight Trump 'attacks' on media as Beijing ramps up state-run radio

When Patsy Widakuswara first saw news that a pro-Trump network would provide content to Voice of America (VOA), she was hunkered down in a bomb shelter in Kyiv. The threat of a Russian attack came during the VOA White House Bureau chief's trip to Ukraine in May, when she attended a security forum and spoke on a panel about freedom of the media. VOA, set up and funded by the US government in 1942 to counter propaganda, was largely silenced in March when the Trump administration slashed its funding. The government agency that housed VOA, the US Agency for Global Media (USAGM), was "a giant rot and burden to the American taxpayer", US President Donald Trump's USAGM senior adviser Kari Lake said at the time. Critics described the move as a "massive gift to America's enemies", and the decision largely gutted VOA, an international broadcaster that previously reached about 360 million people weekly, with news translated in 49 languages then transmitted abroad. Earlier this month, VOA faced a second "attack" — it would be provided with newsfeed services from the One America News Network (OAN). Lake said OAN, known for being the "voice of Trump", offered the content for free, which was an "enormous benefit" for taxpayers. In contrast, VOA has an editorial charter mandating it to be factual, balanced and comprehensive. For Widakuswara, reading news about the OAN deal while sheltering from the risk of Russian bombs was "surreal". She said she felt like she was experiencing "the threat of enemy fire both literally and figuratively". "Here I am, my outlet — that was formed to fight Nazi propaganda and became a powerful tool in the Cold War — was under attack," she said. "Not from our adversaries, but from our own [US] government." Media analysts have warned the decision to align OAN and VOA could distort VOA broadcasts and benefit its enemies in autocratic countries. A recent report from a VOA journalist on administrative leave said skeleton staff left at VOA were yet to use OAN content, and stories published since the deal remained independent, fact based and balanced. It is one of multiple efforts by journalists to resist and fight back against Mr Trump's efforts to cut and control media based in the US. "A free press is the foundation of democracy. Without a free press, people cannot make informed decisions about their governments," Widakuswara said. "Without a free press, who will be there to hold power to account?" The cuts to VOA in March were part of the administration's decision to slash the USAGM budget to the minimum required by law. USAGM subsequently terminated funding to other media agencies it housed, including Radio Free Asia (RFA). The cuts prompted multiple court cases, including one lodged by RFA, a non-profit media agency based mostly in Washington which provides uncensored news to an audience of nearly 60 million people living under repressive regimes across China, Vietnam, North Korea, Laos, Cambodia and Myanmar. RFA recently received a court ruling in its favour that meant it could delay laying off more than 250 staff in May. While the agency has received its April funding, it has not received its May disbursement. Chief executive Bay Fang urged the government to pay RFA funds "on a timely and consistent basis" so RFA could "come back in full force". "As this process drags on, it is clear that China is wasting no time to fill a void left by America's retreat from the information space in the Asia-Pacific region and beyond," she added. As RFA reduced shortwave broadcasts, China "stepped theirs up", RFA analysis said. RFA broadcasts dropped from 60 to six frequencies from October 2024 to March 2025. During the same period, Chinese-state-run China Radio International added 82 broadcasts, according to analysis by a third-party media-monitoring company, Encompass Digital Media. "They largely target audiences that RFA had to step away from: 26 in Tibetan, 16 in Uyghur, 12 in Chinese, and two in Korean. "Two of those broadcasts — one in Uyghur, one in Tibetan — use the same frequency that RFA once did," the analysis said. When funding to RFA was cut, authoritarian regimes including Beijing-backed media celebrated the decision, while activists and analysts warned the closures would create information "black holes" that could be filled by Russian or Chinese services. Vietnamese Australian human rights advocate Trung Doan said RFA was highly regarded in Vietnam, where media was state run and controlled. Mr Doan said authorities were "afraid" of the Vietnamese people being informed by free, independent media outside of government control. RFA and other journalists had been jailed there, he added. "Independent media like Radio Free Asia, they do their own thing, and they report on things that are not necessarily good news for the ruling authority," he said. Gulchehra Hoja, a furloughed RFA employee, knows well the battle between free media and state-controlled messaging. A Uyghur journalist living in exile in the United States, Hoja has worked for RFA's Uyghur service for 24 years. Her reporting has cast light on human-rights abuses perpetrated by Chinese authorities and has won numerous awards. Hoja said the RFA Uyghur department had become her "home" and she was proud of the work she had done, but she had "paid a great price". "Because of my work, my family has been living under the threat of the CCP [Chinese Communist Party] for more than 20 years. After my brother was abducted in September 2017, by the end of January 2018, 24 members of my entire family were detained in the internment camps," she said. Some of them remained in camps and prisons today, she said. Hoja said she worried about the safety of her family but would not "stop being the voice of the Uyghurs". China rejects all accusations of abuse of Uyghurs and other Muslim minority groups in Xinjiang. While RFA staff remain in limbo, nearly 1,300 VOA staff were placed on paid leave in March, including Widakuswara. Another 600 VOA contractors will be terminated at the end of May. About 50 of those hold visas tied to their job. Without their job, they could be forced to return to their home countries, where they could face "retaliation" for their reporting, Widakuswara said. A federal appeals court decision in favour of the Trump administration's gutting of VOA came down last week, but journalists involved in the case said in a statement on X they remained "committed to fighting for their rights". Only a small group of staff remain at VOA and now One America News Network (OAN) content is their only news wire option. Media outlets around the world have contracts with wires services such as Reuters and Associated Press, which gather and feed original, fact-based content that can be republished. "I can't force these outlets to use the news, but I can offer it to them, and that's exactly what we've done," said Ms Lake, the Trump adviser. OAN did not respond to the ABC's requests for comment and on its website said it was an "independent media company focused on providing high quality national television programming". Journalism professor Colleen Murrell, from Dublin City University in Ireland, said the decision to use OAN as VOA's newsfeed service was "completely political". "One American News will simply toe the US government line. You can expect it to be little better than a government PR feed," Professor Murrell said. "This decision is going to completely skew the news that goes out on the service." Professor Murrell warned a change to VOA content would "benefit the service's enemies in autocratic countries with poor media freedom". VOA was "the most sought-after" radio broadcaster in Asia in 2024 by "a considerable margin", according to Lowy Institute analysis. Cambodia, Vietnam and Myanmar are among the countries where the VOA was the most popular. CNN's chief media analyst Brian Stelter, who was unavailable for interview for this story, described the OAN network as a "MAGA propaganda outlet". Mr Stelter wrote that OAN was an "amateurish far-right TV outlet best known for promoting Trump's 2020 election lies" and "having access to OAN content is a big step toward turning the Voice of America into the Voice of Trump". USAGM and VOA did not respond to requests for comment.

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