June 26, 2026
Petition to Deny Seeks to Protect Viewers’ First Amendment Rights, Force Transparency in Disney/ABC Broadcast License Battle
In the fight over the license renewals of
eight Disney-owned ABC television stations, the Media Action Center and
Frequency Forward today filed a Petition to Deny at the Federal
Communications Commission (FCC). The petition demands that the FCC grant
Disney’s renewal applications immediately, but warns that if Disney
agrees to restrict its speech or editorial independence to secure those
renewals, the groups will seek license revocation. By filing a Petition
to Deny, petitioners become parties to the proceedings, can shine a
spotlight on any negotiations, and have standing to appeal FCC decisions
in court.
"Time and time again, We the People have witnessed the
FCC pretend to protect our public interest in broadcasting, but then go
behind closed doors to make secret deals which harm us instead,” said
Sue Wilson, Director of the Media Action Center. “This time, when our
very Democracy is at stake, we are filing a Petition to Deny to become
formal parties to this anti-First Amendment proceeding and defend the
public interest from the weaponization of the FCC. This time, the FCC
must address our arguments so Disney, ABC, and the Commission have no
opportunity to secretly negotiate away the people's rights to our
publicly owned airwaves.”
The petition is accompanied by
declarations from viewers in the affected stations' broadcast markets to
establish standing. By filing a Petition to Deny, the groups receive
procedural rights that informal commenters lack and it preserves a
pathway to challenge the FCC’s actions in court, if necessary.
“Filing
this petition is the difference between being a party to the case and
merely filing an amicus brief,” said Art Belendiuk, legal counsel for
the petitioners. “Comments can inform the FCC, but they do not compel
the agency to act, nor do they guarantee the public a seat at the table.
This unprecedented strategy is necessary because the FCC has taken the
unprecedented step of threatening the integrity of the news by seeking
to replace ABC’s journalistic judgment with an administration-friendly
point of view.”
By becoming a party to the proceeding, the
petitioners are also guaranteed access to all communications between the
parties and commit to making any communication not submitted in FCC
Docket No. 26-131 available for public review.
The eight stations
named in the petition include: KFSN-TV in Fresno, KABC-TV in Los
Angeles, KGO-TV in San Francisco, WLS-TV in Chicago, WABC-TV in New
York, WTVD in Durham, WPVI-TV in Philadelphia, and KTRK-TV in Houston.
The
petition asks the FCC to grant Disney’s renewal applications
immediately and without conditions, terminate any unconstitutional
investigations, and stop using broadcast licensing as a tool to chill
protected speech. But if Disney agrees to restrict its speech in any way
through negotiations with the FCC, this petition is the public’s
opportunity to seek accountability for the corporation’s decision to
undermine viewers' constitutional rights. Read the entire petition here.