Abramowitz v. Lake (VOA independence 2025)
Case Overview
Congress established Voice of America in 1942 with statutory editorial independence from U.S. government control; when the Trump administration appointed Kari Lake to lead USAGM (VOA's parent agency), she attempted to dismantle VOA operations and fire Director Michael Abramowitz — who could only be removed by an independent advisory board under the governing statute. Abramowitz sued and obtained a permanent injunction blocking Lake's removal, with courts holding that the statutory advisory board protection was a valid exercise of congressional authority to insulate VOA from political control.
The Application
Abramowitz, as VOA president, challenges the Trump administration's executive action to dismantle USAGM and VOA, arguing the President lacks unilateral authority to eliminate these federal agencies without Congressional authorization and proper APA procedures.
The Conclusion
The case remains active before Judge Royce C. Lamberth in D.C. District Court as of filing (March 2025), with the outcome dependent on whether courts recognize statutory or constitutional constraints on presidential power to eliminate federal media agencies.
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