Cruz
Likens F.C.C. Chair’s ‘Threat’ to That of a Mafia Boss
The
Republican senator warned that retaliating against media outlets over coverage
that conservatives view as negative would set a “dangerous” precedent.
Megan
Mineiro
By Megan
Mineiro
Reporting
from the Capitol
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/09/19/us/politics/ted-cruz-fcc-abc-jimmy-kimmel.html
Sept. 19,
2025
Senator
Ted Cruz, Republican of Texas, on Friday harshly criticized Federal
Communications Commission Chairman Brendan Carr, accusing him of mafia-like
tactics and saying his threat to retaliate against media companies for speech
on their airwaves was “dangerous as hell.”
Mr. Cruz
was reacting to Mr. Carr’s threat to revoke ABC’s broadcast license because of
remarks by the late-night host Jimmy Kimmel during a Monday night telecast
about the assassination of the right-wing activist Charlie Kirk.
The
remarks from Cruz, who is closely aligned with the president and one of the
most conservative members of the Senate, were the latest evidence that some on
the right are deeply uncomfortable with their fellow Republicans’ efforts to
clamp down on free speech by their political adversaries following Mr. Kirk’s
death.
Mr. Cruz
said Mr. Kimmel had been “lying” in the monologue that prompted ABC to pull his
show, in which the comedian said that conservatives had been trying to portray
Mr. Kirk’s assassin as “anything other than one of them.” But the senator also
took Mr. Carr to task for suggesting on a right-wing podcast that if media
companies did not shut down such statements, the federal government would step
in do so.
“He says,
‘We can do this the easy way, or we can do this the hard way.’” Mr. Cruz said
on his podcast “Verdict with Ted Cruz,” quoting Mr. Carr verbatim. “And I’ve
got to say, that’s right out of Goodfellas. That’s right out of a mafioso
coming into a bar going, ‘Nice bar you have here, it’d be a shame if something
happened to it.’”
He went
on to warn that a crackdown on speech on the left by the Trump administration
would come back to bite conservatives the next time Democrats hold the White
House.
“They
will silence us,” Mr. Cruz said. “They will use this power, and they will use
it ruthlessly. And that is dangerous.”
Since the
assassination of Mr. Kirk, President Trump has increasingly threatened to use
the federal government to silence dissent, including warning that regulators
could strip broadcasters of their licenses if they air negative coverage of
him.
“I think
Brendan Carr is a great American patriot,” Mr. Trump told reporters in the Oval
Office on Friday. “So I disagree with Ted Cruz on that.”
Mr. Cruz
also praised Mr. Carr as “a good guy.”
“I work
closely with him,” the senator said. “But what he said there is dangerous as
hell.”
Even in
the House, where the president often enjoys airtight support from the
Republican majority, a handful of G.O.P. members this week said they could not
back efforts to stifle speech with which they disagreed.
Four
Republicans broke with their party on Tuesday and blocked an effort by G.O.P.
Representative Nancy Mace of South Carolina to censure Representative Ilhan
Omar, Democrat of Minnesota, over a social media post she recirculated after
Mr. Kirk’s assassination that was critical of him.
Three of
the four later said they had voted to kill Ms. Mace’s measure because of free
speech concerns.
“The
right response to reprehensible speech like this isn’t silencing: it’s more
speech,” Representative Jeff Hurd, Republican of Colorado, wrote in a post on
social media, even as he called Ms. Omar’s comments about Mr. Kirk and his
supporters “ghoulish and evil.”
Representative
Tom McClintock, Republican of California, wrote: “A free society depends on
tolerating ALL speech — even hateful speech — confident that the best way to
sort good from evil is to put the two side by side and trust the people to know
the difference.”
Megan
Mineiro is a Times congressional reporter and a member of the 2025-26 Times
Fellowship class, a program for early-career journalists.


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