Federal judge blocks Trump administration from dismantling Voice of
America
[April 23, 2025]
By MICHAEL KUNZELMAN and REBECCA BOONE
WASHINGTON (AP) — A federal judge agreed Tuesday to block the Trump
administration from dismantling Voice of America, the 83-year-old
international news service created by Congress.
U.S. District Judge Royce Lamberth ruled that the administration
illegally required Voice of America to cease operations for the first
time since its World War II-era inception.
Attorneys for Voice of America employees and contractors asked the judge
to restore its ability to broadcast at the same level before President
Donald Trump moved to slash its funding. Lamberth mostly agreed,
ordering the administration to restore Voice of America and two of the
independent broadcast networks operated by the U.S. Agency for Global
Media — Radio Free Asia and Middle East Broadcasting Networks — until
the lawsuits are settled.
The judge denied the request for two other independent networks, Radio
Free Europe/Radio Liberty and Open Technology Fund.
In a March 26 court filing, plaintiffs’ attorneys said nearly all 1,300
of Voice of America’s employees were placed on administrative leave,
while 500 contractors were told that their contracts would be terminated
at the end of last month.

The U.S. Agency for Global Media, which runs Voice of America, has
operated other broadcast outlets, including Radio Free Europe/Radio
Liberty, Radio Free Asia and Radio Free Afghanistan. Congress has
appropriated nearly $860 million for the Agency for Global Media for the
current fiscal year.
Voice of America went dark soon after Trump issued an executive order on
March 14 that pared funding to the Agency for Global Media and six other
unrelated federal entities. It also moved to terminate VOA contracts
with news agencies, including The Associated Press.
Voice of America has operated since World War II, beaming news into
authoritarian countries that don’t have a free press. It began as a
counterpoint to Nazi propaganda and played a prominent role in the U.S.
government’s Cold War efforts to curb the spread of communism.
Trump and his Republican allies have accused Voice of America of having
a “leftist bias” and failing to project “pro-American” values to its
audience.
Plaintiffs' attorneys say it reports and broadcasts the news
“truthfully, impartially, and objectively.”

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The Voice of America building, Monday, June 15, 2020, in Washington.
(AP Photo/Andrew Harnik, File)

“That simple mission is a powerful one for those living across the
globe without access to a free press and without the ability to
otherwise discern what is truly happening,” they wrote.
Government attorneys argued that the plaintiffs failed to show how
they have been irreparably harmed.
“Rather, Plaintiffs take aim at what is best described as a
temporary pause on its activities while Global Media determines how
to bring Voice of America into compliance with the President’s
directive,” they wrote.
The Agency for Global Media's leadership includes special adviser
Kari Lake, a former TV news anchor and political candidate.
In his written ruling, Lamberth noted that the U.S. Agency for
Global Media never finalized its grant agreement with Radio Free
Europe/Radio Liberty for the current fiscal year, and the Open
Technology Fund withdrew its legal request for a temporary
restraining order earlier this year.
Radio Free Asia and Middle East Broadcasting Networks do have
current grant agreements in place, and like Voice of America, are
funded by Congressional appropriations.
Lamberth said the funding cuts “reflect a hasty, indiscriminate
approach" — particularly since they were made the same day that
President Trump signed the congressional appropriation that funded
Voice of America and the networks through September of this year.
Not only is there an absence of “reasoned analysis” from the
defendants; there is an absence of any analysis whatsoever,"
Lamberth said.
The labor union that represents workers at the U.S. Agency for
Global Media called the ruling a “powerful affirmation of the role
that independent journalism plays in advancing democracy and
countering disinformation."
"These networks are essential tools of American soft power — trusted
sources of truth in places where it is often scarce,” said Tom
Yazdgerdi, president of the American Foreign Service Association, in
a press release Tuesday. “By upholding editorial independence, the
court has protected the credibility of USAGM journalists and the
global mission they serve.”
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