The Lights Go Off: How 54 Years Dismantled American Journalism

By TheCommonGoodParty · May 29, 2026 · Originally published on Substack

This analysis was originally published with interactive charts and a sidebar of quick facts and background context at thecommongoodparty.com/analysis/democracy-and-the-broken-press. The text below is the full essay; the web version is recommended for the full experience.

Three threads. A courtroom in Delaware where a media company paid $787.5 million — the largest defamation settlement in American history — after its hosts privately admitted, in writing, that what they were broadcasting was false. A federal court in Washington where a judge found a First Amendment violation the administration then routed around. A desk in Richmond, Virginia, in 1971, where a corporate lawyer wrote the blueprint for both. They are one story.

The Ed Sullivan Theater went dark on May 22, 2026. Stephen Colbert walked out for the last time, and the audience gave him the kind of ovation people give when they sense they are present at an ending. The staff — more than 200 production workers, writers, researchers, segment producers — knew what was coming. The official explanation was financial pressure. Late night is expensive. The math didn't pencil out. Move along.

Nobody in that theater believed it.

What follows is an attempt to connect three threads that American journalism has, for reasons this piece will argue are structural rather than accidental, largely refused to connect. The first runs through a courtroom in Wilmington, Delaware, where in April 2023 a media company paid $787.5 million after its internal communications revealed that its most prominent hosts knew, in real time, that what they were broadcasting was false. The second runs through a federal district court in Washington, D.C., where in April 2026 a judge found that the United States government had violated the First Amendment by banning the world's most important wire service from the White House press pool because it would not rename a body of water. The third runs to a desk in Richmond, Virginia, in August 1971, where a corporate lawyer named Lewis F. Powell Jr. sat down to write a memorandum that would, over the next half-century, reshape the courts, the regulatory state, and the information environment of the United States.

Those three threads are not separate stories. They are one story. This is what it looks like when you pull them together.

I. The Man Who Bought the Punchline

On July 24, 2025, the FCC approved the $8 billion Skydance-Paramount merger. The approval came three weeks after CBS settled Donald Trump's $20 billion lawsuit against the network for $16 million paid to his foundation. Paramount reportedly also agreed to air $20 million in public-service announcements for Trump's causes, eliminate DEI company-wide, and install a Trump-aligned editorial "ombudsman" — commitments detailed in a letter House Judiciary Democrats sent to David Ellison on May 12, 2026. Ellison did not dispute the characterization.

That is the sequence. Lawsuit. Settlement. Merger approval. Three weeks apart.

Bari Weiss was installed as editor in chief of CBS News. Ellison had acquired her outlet, The Free Press, for approximately $150 million. Weiss had never run a television newsroom. The distinction apparently did not trouble anyone at the executive level.

In December 2025, a completed 60 Minutes segment on El Salvador's prison system was killed. A softened version aired in January 2026. By May 2026, Weiss had dismissed Sharyn Alfonsi, Cecilia Vega, and executive producer Tanya Simon — a 30-year CBS veteran — and replaced Simon with Nick Bilton, a technology journalist from the Times who had never run a television news operation. Vega used a word the press prefers to reserve for authoritarian governments: censorship. "Both imposed and self-driven," she told reporters.

Same month: The Late Show canceled. Nine consecutive seasons as late night's highest-rated voice. The final episode aired May 22, 2026. Two hundred production staff out of work.

Across town — or across the regulatory apparatus — Pete Hegseth had offered his own assessment at a March 2026 press briefing. "The sooner David Ellison takes over that network," the Secretary of Defense of the United States said, "the better." He meant CNN. The Warner Bros. Discovery merger — $111 billion, announced February 2026, with WBD shareholders voting in favor on April 23 — would give Ellison control of CNN, HBO, TBS, TNT, and a catalog that defines the shape of American culture.

"The sooner David Ellison takes over that network, the better." — Pete Hegseth, U.S. Secretary of Defense, March 2026 press briefing

The Secretary of Defense of the United States expressed a preference for the editorial direction of a nominally independent news network pending regulatory approval. The comment did not dominate the news cycle.

II. The Regulator as Enforcer

The Associated Press is the wire service on which American journalism runs. Hundreds of newspapers, broadcast affiliates, and digital outlets depend on its feeds. In early 2025, the White House barred it from the press pool. The reason: AP would not rename the Gulf of Mexico the "Gulf of America" in its stylebook.

This is not the most extreme action taken against press freedom in the first half of 2026. It is the most clarifying one. It illustrates, without ambiguity, the mechanism: coverage decisions are now regulatory inputs.

The FCC timeline under Brendan Carr makes the mechanism explicit. In January 2025, Carr reopened the FCC's investigation into 60 Minutes' interview with Kamala Harris — an inquiry a previous commission had dismissed. In February, Trump publicly called for CBS to lose its broadcast licenses. In March, Carr announced he was prepared to block media mergers involving companies with DEI policies, specifically citing the Paramount deal. In April, the longtime executive producer of 60 Minutes resigned, telling colleagues the program had lost its journalistic independence. Scott Pelley said on air: "Paramount began to supervise our content in new ways." In May 2026, the FCC ordered ABC to reapply for all eight of its owned-and-operated broadcast licenses. The FCC's action targeted The View. No comparable inquiry was initiated into Mark Levin or Glenn Beck. ABC's lawyers called it "viewpoint discrimination and retaliatory targeting."

A federal district court judge in Washington ruled in April 2026 that the AP ban violated the First Amendment and ordered the wire service's access restored. The administration responded by reconstituting the press pool entirely, eliminating the wire slot. An appeals court temporarily stayed the lower court's order. The constitutional violation was adjudicated, confirmed, and then routed around.

The funding mechanisms followed the same pattern. An executive order issued May 2, 2025 directed the Corporation for Public Broadcasting to cease funding NPR and PBS. Voice of America was effectively shut down. The United States fell to 64th on the 2026 World Press Freedom Index, the worst ranking since the index began.

III. The Newspaper That Learned Not to Bite the Hand

In October 2024, Jeff Bezos blocked a prepared endorsement of Kamala Harris by The Washington Post's editorial board. Board members resigned. Hundreds of thousands of subscribers canceled. Bezos offered an explanation about institutional neutrality that satisfied almost no one who had watched the paper operate for the preceding decade.

In February 2025, after Bezos met privately with Trump, the paper announced its opinion section would publish only pieces "in support and defense of two pillars: personal liberties and free markets." Staff described it to reporters as editorial self-neutering dressed in libertarian language. The Post announced a $40 million investment in a Melania Trump documentary, accompanied by a $35 million promotional campaign. On May 20, 2026, Bezos told CNBC's Squawk Box that Trump was "more mature, more disciplined." When David Shipley, the Post's opinion editor, warned Bezos about subscriber loss, Status News reported Bezos replied with three words: "I don't care."

"I don't care." — Jeff Bezos, reportedly, on subscriber cancellations

The mechanism here requires no conspiracy to understand. Amazon holds billions in government contracts. The company faces regulatory exposure from agencies the Trump administration controls. A newspaper owner in that position does not need to be threatened into compliance. He already knows what the story costs. The incentive structure is not incidental to the editorial outcomes. It is the cause of them.

IV. The Corruption That Didn't Make the Front Page

On May 28, 2026, Politico's influence newsletter published a single day's tally. Dell had received a $9.7 billion government contract; Dell's CEO had pledged $6 billion to Trump-branded accounts; Trump's investment trust had purchased more than $1 million in Dell shares; Trump had told rally crowds to "go buy a Dell." The CFTC was scrapping a $5 million settlement with Gemini; each of the Winklevoss brothers had donated $1 million in Bitcoin to Trump's 2024 campaign. ProPublica reported that Peter Navarro had secured a $620 million rare-earths contract for a startup with ties to Donald Trump Jr.

Three stories. Same day. None of them was a lead anywhere.

Then there is the $TRUMP memecoin. It launched three days before the inauguration. The SEC — under a Trump-appointed chair — announced it would not regulate memecoins as securities. The coin's code routes a percentage of every transaction to the creators' wallets. The president earns money every time anyone buys or sells, regardless of outcome, regardless of whether the buyer profits.

The $TRUMP Memecoin: By the Numbers

In May 2025, a dinner was held for the top 220 holders of the coin. The top 25 received White House tours and a private meeting. The dinner was repeated in April 2026 for the top 297 holders.

Qatar gifted a Boeing 747-8, valued at approximately $400 million, to the Trump administration in May 2025. The plane is being outfitted as an interim Air Force One. The Foreign Emoluments Clause prohibits gifts from foreign governments without congressional consent. The plane has not been returned.

In the first quarter of 2026, more than 3,700 trades were executed in Trump's account — $220 million to $750 million in total — in companies including Nvidia, Microsoft, Apple, Amazon, and military suppliers whose valuations were directly affected by Trump's decision to support military action against Iran. Federal law prohibits government employees from trading assets affected by their official work. There is a carveout for the president.

There is no mechanism to investigate any of this.

V. The Institutions That Stopped Watching

The Office of Government Ethics has no director. No acting director. No nominee. Trump fired David Huitema in February 2025. Under the Federal Vacancies Reform Act, the office has operated without lawful leadership since December 2025. The entity whose specific statutory function is investigating presidential conflicts of interest is headless, by presidential action, during the most extensively documented period of presidential self-dealing in American history.

On his first days in office, Trump fired 17 agency inspectors general. FBI Director Kash Patel shut down the Bureau's public corruption unit — the division whose specific mandate was investigating government officials.

In May 2026, the Bright Line Watch survey and the UCLA School of Law Safeguarding Democracy Project published the results of polling 21 Article III federal judges, 113 elite lawyers, 193 law professors at top-50 law schools, and 652 political scientists. The findings:

Source: UCLA School of Law Safeguarding Democracy Project.

The events these respondents rated most serious: the shutdown of the FBI's public corruption unit; DHS subpoenas of tech companies for user data without probable cause; blanket pardons for all January 6 defendants issued on inauguration day.

VI. The Price Tag Nobody Published

$2,500. That is the estimated additional annual cost American families will pay in 2026 as a direct result of tariffs, per House Democrats. It is not a Democratic talking point in isolation. Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's, told Fortune in May 2026 that "the tariffs have done significant damage to the economy… job growth standstill… inflation accelerated… 3% year-over-year, up from 2.5%." In February 2026, the Supreme Court ruled that the IEEPA legal basis for the tariffs was unconstitutional. The administration began searching for alternative authority.

The One Big Beautiful Bill — What the CBO Found

Source: Congressional Budget Office / Kiplinger.

DOGE terminated 15,887 grants totaling $49 billion. The National Science Foundation lost $1 billion in already-awarded research grants. AmeriCorps saw approximately $400 million in active grants eliminated and 32,000 positions dissolved. Nine percent of the federal workforce was gone by March 2026. Independent analysis put the true cost of DOGE — accounting for lost tax collection, service disruption, and lost revenue — at more than $135 billion. While directing those cuts, Elon Musk's companies held billions in federal contracts.

What the press missed was not each individual policy. Each individual policy was covered. What was missed was the connection: the same administration raising costs for working families, cutting their healthcare, running up $4.5 trillion in new debt, and enriching the president's family through mechanisms with no historical precedent — all simultaneously, all from the same desk, all under the same signature. Covered as a sidebar. Filed under separate beats.

VII. The Silence You Can't Hear

In May 2026, Salon published an investigation into the spread of self-censorship across American institutions. The reporters documented professors rewriting syllabuses, researchers scrubbing grant applications, journalists at outlets that had not been directly targeted modifying their coverage, law firms declining to take cases, publishers stepping back from LGBTQ+ books, and immigrant communities afraid to leave home. None of these people had been directly threatened. The Salon reporters wrote: "They are the point."

The trust numbers tell the same story from the outside in. Gallup's 2025 survey found that 28 percent of Americans express any trust in the news media — down from 72 percent in 1976. For the first time in the poll's history, complete distrust (36 percent) outweighs any level of trust. The Reuters Institute 2025 Digital News Report ranked the United States last among 46 surveyed countries in news trust.

This did not happen because of anything any single administration did. The trust number for 1976 — 72 percent — is not a Democratic number or a Republican number. It is the number from before. Before the information environment was deliberately redesigned. Before consolidation, deregulation, and the systematic manufacturing of distrust became a coordinated political project.

Which is how this story has to move. Not forward. Back.

VIII. The Blueprint

On August 23, 1971, in Richmond, Virginia, a corporate lawyer named Lewis F. Powell Jr. sat down and wrote a memorandum addressed to the United States Chamber of Commerce. He called it "Attack on American Free Enterprise System." He was two months away from his nomination to the Supreme Court.

Powell's argument was urgent and specific. American business, he wrote, was under coordinated attack — from universities, from the media, from the courts, from politicians. The remedy he proposed was systematic: think tanks, law school centers, funded faculty chairs, sustained media presence, and above all, engagement with the courts. "A vast area of opportunity," he wrote, "if business is willing to provide the funds."

Two months later, Nixon nominated him to the Supreme Court. His rulings unshackled wealthy political donors, extended First Amendment rights to corporations, and curtailed enforcement of the Voting Rights Act.

What followed was an institutional build-out that took 50 years. The organizations below did not operate independently. They were funded by overlapping donor networks — Coors, Koch, Scaife, Olin, Bradley — and coordinated around a shared goal: capturing the courts, deregulating the information environment, and eliminating the administrative state.

The Infrastructure, Built Over 50 Years

Sources: ProPublica / Brookings / Senate Democrats Captured Courts report.

The mechanics require attention. In February 2016, Antonin Scalia died. Barack Obama nominated Merrick Garland. Mitch McConnell announced there would be no hearings, invoking a "long-standing tradition" against confirming Supreme Court justices in an election year. Brookings researchers examined the historical record and found that tradition did not exist. Garland's nomination expired on January 3, 2017 — 293 days later, the longest confirmation blockade in American history.

In September 2020, Ruth Bader Ginsburg died. McConnell announced a vote would proceed on Amy Coney Barrett. The Garland rule went unmentioned. Barrett was confirmed eight days before voters went to the polls. The resulting 6-3 supermajority was built through donor funding, coordinated personnel selection, and a precedent that McConnell manufactured and then discarded when it no longer served its purpose.

Since then: Roe overturned. Broad presidential immunity from criminal prosecution. Chevron deference eliminated, rolling back the regulatory state in ways Powell would have recognized as the fulfillment of his 1971 prescription.

This was not an accident of electoral outcome. It was a plan.

IX. The Information Environment Was Engineered

The Fairness Doctrine was established in 1949. It was not a liberal regulation. It was a regulatory acknowledgment that the broadcast spectrum is public property, and that the license to use it carried a minimal obligation to present contrasting views on controversial public issues. For 38 years it functioned as a structural restraint on the most extreme forms of one-sided political broadcasting.

In 1985, FCC Chairman Mark Fowler — a Reagan campaign communications attorney — released a report calling the doctrine a free speech violation. In 1987, Chairman Dennis Patrick, another Reagan White House aide, called a 4-0 vote and abolished it. Congress passed a bill to restore the doctrine. Reagan vetoed it. The override attempt failed.

One year later, on August 1, 1988, Rush Limbaugh's nationally syndicated program launched on 56 stations, offered free to affiliates. Within 20 months it was the most popular radio talk show in the country. By the mid-1990s it had more than 20 million weekly listeners.

On February 8, 1996, the Telecommunications Act became law — the first major reform of broadcast regulation since 1934. Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting described it as "essentially bought and paid for by corporate media lobbies." The national cap on radio station ownership was eliminated. Clear Channel grew from 40 stations to 1,240. By 2002, ten companies controlled two-thirds of the radio audience. News staffs shrank by 44 percent.

Eight months after the Telecom Act passed, Roger Ailes and Rupert Murdoch launched Fox News. Ailes had packaged Richard Nixon for television in 1968. He had worked for Reagan. He was a media adviser to George H.W. Bush. According to the Center for American Progress's documented history, Fox News was not designed as a neutral news organization with conservative leanings. It was designed as a media operation to serve a political project.

Now to the courtroom in Wilmington.

What They Said On Air vs. What They Said in Private

Internal Fox News communications, October–December 2020 — admitted into evidence, Dominion v. Fox News:

Why did they broadcast it anyway? Fox was losing viewers to OAN and Newsmax, which were broadcasting more aggressive versions of the same false claims. The decision was ratings. The cost was $787.5 million — the largest defamation settlement in American media history. Sources: ABC News / Wikipedia — Dominion v. Fox.

Newsmax paid $67 million to Dominion in August 2025. The judge called it "CRYSTAL clear" that none of the claims were true. Newsmax host Bob Sellers had written: "How long are we going to go along with fraud?" They broadcast it anyway. Newsmax separately paid $40 million to Smartmatic. OAN settled with Smartmatic on undisclosed terms — after internal documents showed OAN had actively collaborated with Powell to create the narratives, not merely repeat them.

The broadcast-to-digital arc is one story. A Brookings 2023 study analyzed 36,603 podcast episodes from 79 prominent political podcasters and found nearly 70 percent spread false or unsubstantiated claims. Conservative hosts were 11 times more likely than liberal hosts to share claims fact-checkers identified as false.

X. The Manual That Wasn't a Secret

920. That is the number of pages in "Mandate for Leadership: The Conservative Promise," published by the Heritage Foundation in April 2023. It was written by 140 former Trump administration officials, distributed publicly, and posted on Heritage's website. Heritage President Kevin Roberts described his organization's role as "institutionalizing Trumpism." During the 2024 campaign, Trump denied any connection to the document. CNN found at least 140 contributors had previously served in his administration.

Four days into his second term, nearly two-thirds of Trump's executive actions mirrored or partially mirrored Project 2025 proposals. PBS NewsHour's tracking found approximately half of all Project 2025 objectives had been enacted by December 2025.

Project 2025: What It Called For vs. What Happened

Sources: PBS NewsHour tracker / ACLU.

The document was covered during the campaign as an opposition research concern — a thing Democrats were worried about, one perspective among several. After the election, its implementation was covered as a series of unrelated policy stories. Each story got its own reporter, its own byline, its own news cycle, its own severance from the others. The mechanism — a coordinated plan, executed by the people who wrote it, in the jobs they anticipated holding, on the timeline they had projected — remained invisible.

XI. Three Failures

The first failure is ownership. When the owner of a major newspaper holds billions in business exposed to the regulatory decisions of the administration that newspaper is supposed to cover, there is a structural conflict of interest. At the Washington Post it is Jeff Bezos. At CBS it is David Ellison. At NBC it is Comcast. At ABC it is Disney. The mechanisms differ. The incentive structure is identical. You do not need to threaten the owner. The owner already knows what the story costs.

The second failure is culture. The instinct of American political journalism toward false balance — toward "both sides," toward presenting documented institutional dismantling as "one perspective among many" — was not invented in 2025. It was a professional norm. In a normal political environment, that norm produces fair journalism. In an environment where one party is engaged in a documented, 54-year project to capture courts, deregulate information, and eliminate institutional oversight, the both-sides norm becomes a mechanism of protection for the project.

The third failure is nerve. Cecilia Vega named it precisely when she said what was happening at CBS was censorship, "both imposed and self-driven." The self-driven part is the part the press has not accounted for publicly. Fear of regulatory retaliation, of advertiser pressure, of owner preference — none of these needs to be spoken aloud to be effective. Editors make decisions. Those decisions accumulate. Those accumulations become the contours of what is and is not covered, what is and is not connected, what is and is not described as the thing it actually is.

These numbers are not the cause of the failures described in this piece. They are the consequence of them.

XII. The Reckoning

The lights went off in the Ed Sullivan Theater on May 22, 2026, and everyone was told it was about money. Late night is expensive. The math didn't pencil out. Move along.

The cancellation of The Late Show is not a story about financial pressures in late-night television. It is a story about what happens at the end of a 54-year project, when the mechanisms are in place and the cost of accountability becomes high enough that the institutions charged with providing it begin to eliminate it themselves.

Thomas Jefferson wrote: "Were it left to me to decide whether we should have a government without newspapers, or newspapers without a government, I should not hesitate a moment to prefer the latter."

The logic is not sentimental. It describes a structural relationship between press freedom and self-governance — a relationship in which the capacity of citizens to make informed decisions about who governs them depends on the existence of a press that is free to report what the government is doing. Jefferson wrote it in 1787. The preceding 54 years have been methodically severing that relationship.

The lights go off in the Ed Sullivan Theater. Two hundred people are out of work. The show will not be saved by the next journalist who asks the right question. But the questions themselves — documented, sourced, on the record, traceable from Richmond in 1971 to Wilmington in 2023 to Washington in 2026 — are not gone.

The record is what remains.

Where the Common Good Party stands

Every failure traced in this piece has a corresponding plank in the CGP platform — with specific bill names, dollar figures, and day-one actions. Six of them:

Join the Common Good Party

The record is what remains. The work is what comes next. The Common Good Party is a community-built American party with 50 sourced policy positions, 8 pillars of press-freedom reform, and an active organizing program. Membership is free.

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Sources

The full sourced reading list — every citation in this piece — is on the web version at thecommongoodparty.com/analysis/democracy-and-the-broken-press. Headline references include:

Read the full annotated version with interactive charts, sidebar context, and the complete 40-source reading list at thecommongoodparty.com/analysis/democracy-and-the-broken-press.

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