Schiff Vows Congressional Probes of ABC and CBS Trump Defamation Settlements if Democrats Retake House
On the latest episode of "The Town" podcast, Sen. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., warned that if Democrats regain control of Congress in the 2026 midterms, he will push for investigations into ABC News, CBS News, and their parent companies over multimillion‑dollar defamation settlements paid personally to President Donald Trump. Schiff accused the Trump administration of putting its "hand on the scale" for Paramount in its successful $111 billion bid to acquire Warner Bros. Discovery and suggested the deals with Trump — including a $16 million payment from ABC approved by then‑Disney CEO Bob Iger and a similar $16 million upfront settlement from Paramount/CBS — could reflect "corrupt or illicit" or otherwise "improper" considerations. He said there will be an "accounting" of any "money changing hands to grease the skids" that altered content or favored Paramount’s position, explicitly tying potential future oversight to the merger’s implications for CNN, which Paramount CEO David Ellison insists will retain editorial independence. Media critics on the left have already attacked the settlements as capitulations to Trump, while Schiff’s threats raise fresh questions about how far a future Democratic Congress might go in scrutinizing private media‑company decisions that intersect with presidential power and major corporate transactions.
📌 Key Facts
- Sen. Adam Schiff told 'The Town' podcast that when Democrats 'change hands' in Congress there will be investigations into ABC, CBS and their corporate parents over settlements paid to President Trump.
- Schiff cited ABC News’ December 2024 $16 million settlement and apology to Trump over George Stephanopoulos’ false on‑air statement that Trump had been 'found liable for rape' in the E. Jean Carroll case.
- The article notes a similar $16 million upfront settlement from Paramount/CBS News to Trump, and Schiff alleged the Trump administration put its 'hand on the scale' for Paramount in its $111 billion bid for Warner Bros. Discovery, which would give Paramount control of CNN.
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