At the Voice of America, the Trump administration is moving swiftly to
assert its vision
[March 06, 2025]
By DAVID BAUDER
As it has with other government agencies, the Trump administration is
moving swiftly to assert its vision at the Voice of America. As it does
so, a question hangs in the air: Is the news organization's journalistic
mission, which dates to World War II, in for some fundamental changes?
Within the past week, VOA placed veteran U.S.-based journalist Steve
Herman on an extended absence to investigate his social media
activities, and moved to reassign White House bureau chief Patsy
Widakuswara, who had been disciplined during the first Trump
administration.
President Donald Trump's choice to lead VOA, unsuccessful Arizona
gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake, joined the organization as a special
adviser while awaiting the approval necessary to take over.
Voice of America beams audio and online news reports about the United
States throughout the world, typically in the native languages of
countries where it operates. At birth, Voice of America told stories
about democracy to people in Nazi Germany.
Charter mandates editorial independence
The agency's charter requires that its journalists deliver independent
news and information, and not be a government mouthpiece. Conservatives
have often chafed at that; outgoing Secretary of State Mike Pompeo told
the agency employees in 2021 that they often sounded like “Vice of
America" and shouldn't be afraid to extol the country's greatness.

Trump has also been critical. He said on social media that Lake's
appointment will help “ensure that the American values of Freedom and
Liberty are broadcast around the world FAIRLY and ACCURATELY, unlike the
lies spread by the Fake News Media.”
Billionaire Elon Musk, leading Trump's government efficiency efforts,
has no use for the organization. He posted on X on Feb. 9 to “shut them
down.” Musk wrote that “nobody listens to them anymore” and that it's
“just radical left crazy people talking to themselves while torching”
taxpayer money.
In January, the president appointed L. Brent Bozell, founder of the
conservative watchdog Media Research Center, to lead the U.S. Agency for
Global Media, which oversees Voice of America and sister outlets like
Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty and Radio Free Asia. The appointment
requires Senate approval.
Herman ran afoul of VOA leadership in early February for what could be
considered a typical journalist's act: tweeting a link to comments by an
activist critical of the administration's efforts to dismantle USAID. A
Trump administration official, Richard Grenell, labeled that
“treasonous” and said Herman should be fired.
Last Friday, Herman received a letter effectively suspending him with
pay. The action is pending an investigation “regarding whether your
social media activity has undermined VOA's audiences' perception of the
objectivity and/or credibility of VOA and its news operation,” according
to the letter, obtained by The Associated Press.
VOA “believes that your continued presence in the workplace may
otherwise jeopardize legitimate U.S. government interests,” said the
letter, signed by John Featherly, acting deputy director, programming
directorate.
A representative for the U.S. Agency for Global Media said Tuesday that
it does not discuss personnel matters.
VOA managers told journalists there on Monday about Widakuswara's
assignment, without making clear why it was being done or what she would
be doing in the future. As a White House reporter in 2021, she was
demoted for shouting questions at Pompeo following his appearance at the
agency, including one referencing the Jan. 6 U.S. Capitol riot. That
proved to be short-lived, however, as former President Joe Biden removed
agency leadership the day after he was inaugurated.
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The Voice of America building, Monday, June 15, 2020, in Washington.
(AP Photo/Andrew Harnik, File)

Yet in the wake of her demotion four years ago, dozens of
Widakuswara's colleagues signed a letter protesting her treatment,
and there's some concern that the action could make them targets
with Trump loyalists returning, according to an employee who spoke
under condition of anonymity for fear of reprisal.
Are stories being edited to minimize criticism of Trump?
There have also been instances of VOA stories being edited or
watered down to minimize criticism of Trump, according to some
journalists there who spoke on condition of anonymity.
Some holdovers at VOA appear to be trying to appease future leaders
from the Trump team, said a former manager there who has heard of
similar instances and spoke under condition of anonymity in fear
that some people he still knows there could be punished.
A story on VOA's website on Tuesday about the Trump administration's
imposition of tariffs played it straight, with contributions from
The Associated Press, Agence France-Presse and Reuters. But it
included criticism of Trump's plan by leaders in Canada, Mexico and
China.
The quick moves by the Trump administration to assert itself at VOA
stands in contrast to the president's first term, where his choice
to lead the agency, Robert Pack, didn't take office until three
years into the presidency. Trump supporters have also taken a close
look at news organizations that are supported in part by government
funding, like PBS and NPR, and at government payments for news
subscriptions.
In a memo announcing Lake's appointment as an adviser last week,
VOA's chief financial officer Roman Napoli, said the former
television anchor's experience in journalism and broadcasting “will
be invaluable as we continue our mission to clearly and effectively
present the policies of the Trump administration around the world.”
That caused some internal concern. “If what they're going to create
is an all-Trump, all the time outlet, we're going to lose our
credibility and our resources,” said the former manager at VOA.
In her own memo to staff later in the week, Lake cited comments made
by former President John F. Kennedy upon the 20th anniversary of
Voice of America that the task is to tell America's story around the
world and do it in a way that is truthful. “That remains our job
today,” she wrote.

“I am committed to quickly reforming and modernizing the agency into
something the American people are willing to support,” she wrote. “I
look forward to working with you.”
Lake's appointment as leader of VOA is pending approval of the
International Broadcasting Advisory Board, which works with the head
of the agency that Bozell was chosen to lead. However, that board's
membership was recently disbanded by Trump.
Jeffrey Trimble, a former deputy director of that advisory board's
predecessor, said the new administration had every right to seek
congressional approval to change Voice of America's mission. But he
thought that would be unwise, since the message VOA sends to other
countries about the free flow of ideas in a democracy has a power in
its own.
“It represents a core value of our democracy, which is robust debate
about the issues,” Trimble said. “They can change that if they want
to. But at the moment, they are governed by law.”
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