Federal Communications Commission chair backs Nexstar, Tegna merger

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Federal Communications Commission chair backs Nexstar, Tegna merger

U.S. Chamber of Commerce 2025 Global Aerospace Summit · Reuters

David Shepardson

Thu, February 19, 2026 at 5:05 AM GMT+9 2 min read

By David Shepardson

WASHINGTON, Feb 18 (Reuters) - The chair of the Federal Communications Commission said Wednesday he supports Nexstar’s proposed $3.54 billion acquisition of ‌Tegna that would make the combined entity the largest U.S. regional ‌TV station operator.

“I support that transaction. We’re going to be moving forward,” FCC Chair Brendan ​Carr told reporters. Earlier this month, President Donald Trump publicly backed the merger.

He did not say if the deal would be referred at the staff level or by the full commission.

Acquiring Tegna would expand Nexstar’s presence covering 80% of TV ‌households across key geographies ⁠and would require the FCC to lift the cap on station ownership.

Local media is grappling with falling revenue and subscriber ⁠losses because of the popularity of streaming services.

Current FCC rules limit a company from owning broadcast television stations that reach more than 39% of U.S. television audience ​households, but ​stations with weaker over-the-air signals can ​be partially counted against a company’s ‌ownership cap.

Carr has said he believed the cap could be revised by the commission without approval of Congress, though Democratic FCC Commissioner Anna Gomez said she did not think it had that authority.

The National Association of Broadcasters has urged the FCC to repeal its 85-year-old national television ownership rule, saying ‌the rule is unfair because Big Tech companies ​do not face the same restrictions.

Chris Ruddy, ​CEO of conservative cable news ​channel Newsmax, told Congress this month the station ownership cap “remains ‌one of the last meaningful protections ​for competition and diversity ​in the broadcast and cable ecosystem.”

Carr earlier this month said that national networks like Comcast and Walt Disney have amassed too much power ​and argued the Tegna-Nexstar ‌deal will bring real competition.

Trump has frequently criticized news coverage by ​mainstream outlets and urged Carr to take action against broadcasters.

(Reporting by ​David Shepardson; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama)

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