【AI前沿】Fighting Trump will make or break Disney’s new CEO
StreamingEntertainmentPolicyFighting Trump will make or break Disney’s new CEOJosh D’Amaro is already defining his legacy by pushing back against the Trump era FCC.byCharles Pulliam-MooreMay 13, 2026, 7:15 PM UTCLinkShareGiftGetty ImagesCharles Pulliam-Mooreis a reporter focusing on film, TV, and pop culture. Before The Verge, he wrote about comic books, labor, race, and more at io9 and Gizmodo for almost five years.A week ago, newly appointed Disney CEO Josh D’Amaro was busy regaling investors with plans to turn Disney Plus into the company’s “digital centerpiece.” By last Friday, though, his attention had presumably shifted to a fight with the Trump administration over free speech.Disney-owned ABC has now accused the administration of violating itsFirst Amendment rightswith an ongoing investigation intoThe View. D’Amaro — the former head of Disney’s parks division — might have wanted his legacy to be defined by corporate synergy and a souped-up version of Disney Plus. But this fight with Donald Trump and the Federal Communications Commission is likely to be the first thing that defines his tenure.In itsrecent filing to the FCC, ABC claimed that the agency is threatening free speech withits ongoing investigationinto whetherThe Viewviolated the “equal time” rule, which requires radio and TV broadcasters to provide competing political candidates with equal access and time. Ahead of this year’s midterm elections,The Viewran segments featuring James Talarico and Jasmine Crockett — two Texas Democratic candidates running for Senate seats — and the FCC seems to be taking issue with the fact that the show did not invite any Republican politicians to speak on camera.RelatedThe FCC is going after the broadcast licenses of Disney-owned ABC stationsTrump demands ABC fire Jimmy KimmelFormer FCC staffers agree: Brendan Carr needs to be stoppedABC’s filing notes thatThe Viewwas given an exemption from the equal time rule “more than twenty years ago” because it is a “bona fide news interview program.” The company also insisted that, by attackingThe View, the FCC is taking action that will “chill core First Amendment-protected speech for years and potentially decades to come.”“The danger is that the government will simply decide which perspectives to regulate and which to leave undisturbed,” ABC said. “In fact, while the Commission now questionsThe View’s decades-long exemption, it has not expressed any inclination to apply a similar interpretation of the equal opportunities rule to other broadcasters, including the many voices— conservative and liberal—on broadcast radio.”This flavor of bullying from the FCC andTrump-appointed Chairman Brendan Carrbegan long before D’Amaro replaced Bob Iger. Relying on the FCC’s news distortion rule,Carr threatenedto strip the broadcast licenses of any station airingJimmy Kimmel Live!in response to the late-night show featuringa joke about Republican reactions to Charlie Kirk’s death. Those threats prompted ABCto pull the showfor about a week beforenew episodes began airing again.It was clear that Disney / ABC were trying to keep the Trump administration happy, but that has not stopped the president fromcalling for Kimmel’s firing againand creating new headaches for Disney. The FCCrecently ordered Disney-owned ABC stationsin eight different markets to renew their broadcast licenses by May 28th even though they weren’t originally scheduled to do so until 2028. And while the FCC is specifically targetingThe Viewnow, back in January,the organization signaledthat it plans to more broadly revoke the equal time exemptions granted to other daytime and late-night talk shows.No amount of prostration from Disney will keep Trump from going after the companyIn contrast to Disney, capitulation to the Trump administration has served Paramount very well over the past year as it negotiatedan $8 billion acquisition dealwith David Ellison’s Skydance. It seemed very clear that Paramount was trying to curry favor with the Trump administration when the company announced last summer that it wascancelingThe Late Show with Stephen Colbert.Paramountsaidthat the move was a cost-saving measure. That would have been much easier to believe if the president didn’t havea history of beefing with Colbertthrough the FCC and if Paramount and Skydance didn’t need the FCC’s regulatory approval to finalize their megamerger.History has shown us that no amount of prostration from Disney will keep Trump from going after the company because he sees it as a political enemy. That might not have been readily apparent to D’Amaro’s predecessors, like Iger —who signed offon paying Trump $15 million to settlea defamation suit in 2024— and Bob Chapek,who refused to condemn Florida’s “Don’t Say Gay”bill even as Disney employees staged walkouts over concerns about how that legislation could harm them personally. But this reality is something that D’Amaro can’t ignore now because Trump and his allies are making it crystal clear through the