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Ellen's 5th District Campaign Update: Tackling Media and Propaganda Accountability in Congress

Hey folks in the 5th District—Ellen here, your dedicated voice in Washington fighting for transparency, free speech, and holding powerful interests accountable. Page, thanks for following up from Chicago—it's constituents like you who keep me focused on issues that matter, like ensuring our media landscape isn't skewed by government or corporate overreach. With concerns rising about media bias, propaganda, and the suppression of alternative viewpoints (think coordinated efforts to label or throttle "misinformation" on everything from elections to health), the 119th Congress has introduced several bills aiming to address these problems. These target government-funded "propaganda," federal involvement in censorship, and Big Tech's role in content suppression. As of January 16, 2026, most are early-stage and stalled in committees, but they're fueling important debates on First Amendment protections without infringing on private rights. I've pulled together a table on the key ones based on current info—no how-tos, just balanced overviews with pros and cons from ongoing discussions. I'm pushing for reforms that protect truth-seeking while avoiding new forms of overreach.

Bill Name Description & Status Pros Cons
Censorship Accountability Act (S.67) Introduced by Sen. Eric Schmitt (R-MO) on Jan. 9, 2025; referred to Senate Judiciary Committee, no further action. Creates a federal cause of action allowing individuals to sue federal employees for depriving them of First Amendment rights through censorship or suppression under color of law. Holds government officials personally accountable for overreach in suppressing speech, deters federal coercion of platforms or media to bias content, strengthens protections against viewpoint discrimination. Could lead to frivolous lawsuits overwhelming courts and chilling legitimate government actions (e.g., removing illegal content), may not address corporate roles in bias without broader reforms.
Stop the Censorship Act (H.R.908) Introduced by Rep. Paul Gosar (R-AZ) on Feb. 4, 2025; referred to House Energy and Commerce Committee, no further action. Amends Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act to revoke Big Tech's immunity for censoring "otherwise objectionable" material, limiting protections to unlawful content; requires platforms to follow their own terms of service and allows antitrust claims. Curbs corporate overreach by ending broad censorship powers, promotes neutrality in content moderation, addresses suppression of political speech (e.g., election or COVID info) by holding platforms liable for bias. Might expose platforms to excessive litigation, potentially reducing moderation of harmful content like hate speech, could hinder innovation if companies fear lawsuits over user-generated material.
Repeal the Smith-Mundt Modernization Act of 2013 (H.R.5704) Introduced by Rep. Thomas Massie (R-KY) on Oct. 8, 2025; referred to House Foreign Affairs Committee, no further action. Repeals the 2013 act that allowed limited domestic dissemination of U.S. government-produced materials (originally for foreign audiences), aiming to prohibit federal propaganda from influencing domestic media or public opinion. Prevents government overreach in spreading biased narratives domestically, restores barriers against state-sponsored propaganda, enhances accountability by limiting federal influence on media coverage. Could restrict access to useful government information (e.g., international broadcasts), adds archiving burdens, may not directly tackle corporate or private media bias.
End U.N. Censorship Act (H.R.417) Introduced by Rep. Ben Cline (R-VA) on Jan. 15, 2025; referred to House Foreign Affairs Committee, no further action. Prohibits U.S. federal funds from supporting the U.N.'s iVerify fact-checking tool or any efforts to label speech as mal-, mis-, or dis-information, targeting international involvement in content suppression. Blocks government funding for tools that could suppress dissenting views under the guise of combating misinformation, protects free speech from international overreach, promotes accountability in global fact-checking. Might limit U.S. ability to counter actual foreign propaganda or disinformation campaigns, could be seen as overly broad, potentially weakening collaborative efforts against real harms like election interference.
Defund Government-Sponsored Propaganda Act (H.R.1216) Introduced by Rep. [redacted for brevity] on Feb. 11, 2025; referred to House Energy and Commerce Committee, no further action (companion S.518 in Senate). Prohibits federal funding for PBS, NPR, and successors, requiring transfer of funds to reduce public debt; views public broadcasting as biased government propaganda. Reduces taxpayer support for allegedly biased media, addresses perceived government overreach in funding "propaganda," frees up funds for debt reduction while encouraging private alternatives. Threatens access to educational and local programming in underserved areas, could suppress diverse viewpoints if public media is defunded without replacements, ignores NPR/PBS's non-profit status.

These bills reflect a push, mostly from Republicans, to rein in what they see as coordinated government-Big Tech efforts to bias media and suppress "truth efforts"—drawing from revelations like the Twitter Files and admissions of platform-government collusion. In our district, where Chicagoans rely on diverse media for community news, I'm advocating for balanced approaches that protect free expression without creating new biases. Democrats like me are cautious about reforms that could inadvertently harm content moderation against real threats. If this hits home, reach out to my campaign—let's ensure the 5th District's voice shapes these debates for fairer media!


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