Updated
Updated · CNBC · May 28
Disney Files 8 Early ABC License Renewals Under Protest Against FCC Order
Updated
Updated · CNBC · May 28

Disney Files 8 Early ABC License Renewals Under Protest Against FCC Order

11 articles · Updated · CNBC · May 28
  • Eight Disney-owned ABC stations filed renewal applications years early on Thursday, with Disney calling the FCC order “unlawful, arbitrary, and unconstitutional.”
  • The filings answer an April FCC directive that pulled license reviews forward from 2028-2031 after the agency escalated scrutiny of Disney’s diversity, equity and inclusion practices.
  • Disney said the FCC has not demanded an early renewal in more than 50 years and argued the order serves no legitimate investigative purpose and violates the First Amendment.
  • The review follows a broader FCC probe opened last year into Disney and other media companies over possible unlawful discrimination under the Communications Act of 1934.
  • The timing also drew political-motivation criticism after renewed backlash from President Donald Trump over Jimmy Kimmel comments on ABC; the FCC did not immediately comment.
Can a company's diversity policies legally trigger an early, government-forced broadcast license renewal?
What does this clash signal about the future of corporate free speech versus federal regulatory power?

FCC Orders Early License Review for Disney’s ABC Stations: Unprecedented Regulatory Action Sparks First Amendment Showdown

Overview

In late April 2026, the FCC issued an unprecedented order targeting The Walt Disney Company, marking a significant escalation in regulatory scrutiny. This was the first direct step by the FCC toward potentially revoking Disney’s valuable ABC station licenses, a threat Chairman Brendan Carr had repeatedly made. The order required Disney to file early license renewals for its ABC-owned stations, even though these were not due until 2028. The FCC explained this move as part of a long-running investigation into Disney’s DEI conduct, not its broadcast speech. However, the action drew immediate criticism from First Amendment advocates, highlighting concerns about regulatory overreach and media independence.

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