“I don't understand why they call it public broadcasting,” then-Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich (R-Ga.) said in 1995, during another GOP attempt to defund the agency. “As far as I am concerned, there's nothing public about it; it's an elitist enterprise. Rush Limbaugh is public broadcasting.”

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If Republicans are hoping to cripple political coverage by NPR and PBS, however, stopping the flow of taxpayer dollars to the Corporation for Public Broadcasting might not have the desired effect. NPR relies on the corporation for less than 1 percent of its revenue, and PBS depends on the agency for less than 7 percent, according to data from 2014, the most recent year for which audited financial statements for all three entities were available.

Because the Corporation for Public Broadcasting has low overhead costs, it distributes almost all of the taxpayer money it receives, in the form of grants. From its $445 million appropriation in 2014, the corporation paid out $441.7 million, or 99.3 percent.

The vast majority of that money, 90.3 percent, went to local stations in places such asLawton, Okla., and Texarkana, Tex., not to PBS and NPR.

Defunding the Corporation for Public Broadcasting would primarily affect local public broadcasters, not PBS and NPR — a point the agency made in a statement responding to Lamborn's bill.

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The federal investment in public media is vital seed money — especially for stations located in rural America, and those serving underserved populations where the appropriation counts for 40 to 50 percent of their budget. The loss of this seed money would have a devastating effect. These stations would have to raise approximately 200 percent more in private donations to replace the federal investment

Unsurprisingly, much of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting's grant money is directed toward media-dense states such as New York and California, which are reliably blue. But stations in the states that voted for Trump received $186.1 million in 2014.

In other words, defunding the Corporation for Public Broadcasting would mean hurting the local TV and radio stations that a whole lot of Republican voters watch and listen to.

It is worth noting that a second bill filed by Lamborn would prohibit local public radio stations from using grant money to buy NPR programming. NPR earns more than one-third of its revenue by charging local stations to air its content.