The Sentinel-Record

Biden cleans house at Voice of America following revolt over Trump changes

- MATTHEW LEE

WASHINGTON — The Biden administra­tion has moved quickly to remove a number of senior officials aligned with former President Donald Trump from the Voice of America and the agency that oversees all U.S.-funded internatio­nal broadcasti­ng.

The actions address fears that the U.S. Agency for Global Media was being turned into a pro-Trump propaganda outlet. The agency announced Thursday that VOA’s director and his deputy had been removed from their positions and that the head of the Office of Cuba Broadcasti­ng had resigned.

The moves come just a day after President Joe Biden was sworn in and demanded the resignatio­n of Trump’s hand-picked CEO of USAGM, Michael Pack. The agency said in a statement that VOA director Robert Reilly had been fired just weeks after having taken the job. He had been harshly criticized just last week for demoting a VOA White House correspond­ent who tried to ask former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo a question after a town hall event.

Two agency officials familiar with the matter said Reilly and his deputy, Elizabeth Robbins, were escorted from VOA’s headquarte­rs by security guards. The officials were not authorized to discuss personnel matters and spoke on condition of anonymity. In addition, Jeffrey Shapiro, who was just recently appointed to run Cuba-focused broadcaste­rs Radio and TV Marti, resigned at the request of the new administra­tion, they said.

Pack, who appointed all three of those terminated on Thursday, resigned just hours after Biden was inaugurate­d. Soon after his resignatio­n, the Biden White House announced that a veteran VOA journalist, Kelu Chao, would head USAGM on an interim basis.

Pack created a furor when he took over the agency last year and fired the boards of all the outlets under his control along with the leadership of the individual broadcast networks. The actions were criticized as threatenin­g the broadcaste­rs’ prized editorial independen­ce.

The moves raised fears that Pack, a conservati­ve filmmaker and former associate of Trump’s onetime political strategist Steve Bannon, intended to turn venerable U.S. media outlets into pro-Trump propaganda machines. His further actions did little to ease those concerns.

Indeed, just on Tuesday he appointed new conservati­ve members to the boards of Radio Free Asia, Radio Free Europe/ Radio Liberty and the Middle East Broadcasti­ng Networks.

Biden had been expected to make major changes to the agency’s structure and management, and Pack’s early departure signaled that those would be coming sooner rather than later. Though many presidenti­al appointees resign when a new administra­tion comes in, Pack was not required to do so. His three-year position was created by Congress and was not limited by the length of a particular administra­tion.

VOA was founded during World War II and its congressio­nal charter requires it to present independen­t news and informatio­n to internatio­nal audiences.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? In this June 15, 2020, file photo, the Voice of America building stands in Washington. Former President Donald Trump’s hand-picked chief of U.S. internatio­nal broadcasti­ng has quit amid a burgeoning staff revolt and growing calls for his resignatio­n. Michael Pack resigned as the chief executive office of the U.S. Agency for Global Media just minutes after President Joe Biden was inaugurate­d on Wednesday. The agency runs the Voice of America and sister networks.
The Associated Press In this June 15, 2020, file photo, the Voice of America building stands in Washington. Former President Donald Trump’s hand-picked chief of U.S. internatio­nal broadcasti­ng has quit amid a burgeoning staff revolt and growing calls for his resignatio­n. Michael Pack resigned as the chief executive office of the U.S. Agency for Global Media just minutes after President Joe Biden was inaugurate­d on Wednesday. The agency runs the Voice of America and sister networks.

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