ABC’s The View reportedly declined a request from New York City mayor Zohran Mamdani to feature two Democratic socialist congressional candidates alongside him, as the network takes a more cautious approach while facing an ongoing Federal Communications Commission investigation into its political guest bookings.
According to a report from Semafor, representatives for Mamdani approached the daytime talk show about appearing with Democratic congressional candidates Darializa Avila Chevalier and Claire Valdez. While the show remained open to hosting Mamdani, it reportedly declined to include the two House candidates because of concerns surrounding the FCC’s equal-time inquiry.
The inquiry was launched earlier this year by FCC Chairman Brendan Carr following The View’s February interview with Texas Democratic Senate candidate James Talarico.
Carr has argued that the appearance may have implicated the federal equal-time rule, which generally requires broadcast television stations to provide comparable opportunities to competing candidates seeking the same office.
ABC has rejected the interpretation.
The network maintains that The View has long been recognized by the FCC as a bona fide news interview program, making it exempt from equal-time requirements that apply to other types of political programming.
In filings with the agency, ABC argued the investigation threatens to overturn decades of established precedent and could chill protected political speech.
Although the FCC has opened a public-comment proceeding, it has not issued a final ruling or taken enforcement action against the network.
According to Semafor, the investigation has nevertheless prompted The View to avoid booking candidates involved in active elections.
The program has continued to host political figures who are not engaged in contested races. Semafor reported that The View has not hosted a candidate competing in a contested midterm race since the FCC inquiry began.
Vice President JD Vance appeared on the show in June to promote his memoir, while Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.) visited to discuss his new book.
According to Semafor, some members of the mayoral nominee’s circle were upset by recent comments from co-host Sara Haines regarding congressional candidate Darializa Avila Chevalier.
During a recent broadcast, Haines said, “I’m gonna full-blown call her an antisemite. She would proudly call herself that, trust me.”
The remarks reportedly prompted one of Mamdani’s aides to complain to ABC executives, warning that the comments could affect whether Mamdani and other democratic socialist candidates would agree to appear on the show in the future.
Chevalier recently defeated five-term Rep. Adriano Espaillat in the Democratic primary for New York’s 13th Congressional District. She has drawn national attention for her criticism of Israel and fringe positions, including abolishing prisons.
Claire Valdez, the other candidate reportedly proposed for the appearance, won the Democratic nomination in New York’s open 7th Congressional District.
The reported caution by ABC comes as the network also faces outside pressure from conservative groups.
Last week, the New York Post reported that a conservative media watchdog urged the FCC not to renew ABC’s broadcast licenses, alleging persistent political bias at the network.
Whether the FCC ultimately agrees that The View qualifies for the longstanding news-interview exemption could have implications extending well beyond ABC, potentially affecting how broadcast television programs across the country book political candidates during election seasons.
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